Systems and methodologies are described that facilitate frequency hopping in a single carrier FDMA wireless environment by dynamically altering user offsets with time to obtain interference diversity. A channel tree can be utilized with nodes that are assigned values. user devices can be assigned to such nodes, a path between an assigned node and a root node in the channel tree can be evaluated, and a table lookup can be performed to determine an identity of a subcarrier set to assign to the user device assigned to a given node, as well as a number of subcarriers to be assigned to the user device. Additionally, node values can be dynamically varied during a communication event to alter path values and thus alter subcarrier set assignments.

Patent
   8917654
Priority
Apr 19 2005
Filed
Nov 18 2011
Issued
Dec 23 2014
Expiry
Aug 22 2025
Assg.orig
Entity
Large
10
1219
currently ok
15. A method for wireless communication, comprising:
assigning an offset to a user device, the offset being one of a plurality of offsets available for transmission of single-carrier frequency division multiple-access (FDMA) symbols, each of the plurality of offsets being associated with a different starting subcarrier among a plurality of subcarriers available for transmission of single-carrier FDMA symbols; and
varying the offset for the user device based on a predetermined pattern.
21. An apparatus for wireless communication, comprising:
means for assigning an offset to a user device, the offset being one of a plurality of offsets available for transmission of single-carrier frequency division multiple-access (FDMA) symbols, each of the plurality of offsets being associated with a different starting subcarrier among a plurality of subcarriers available for transmission of single-carrier FDMA symbols; and
means for varying the offset for the user device based on a predetermined pattern.
27. A non-transitory computer-readable medium having stored thereon computer-executable instructions for:
assigning an offset to a user device, the offset being one of a plurality of offsets available for transmission of single-carrier frequency division multiple-access (FDMA) symbols, each of the plurality of offsets being associated with a different starting subcarrier among a plurality of subcarriers available for transmission of single-carrier FDMA symbols; and
varying the offset for the user device based on a predetermined pattern.
52. A method for wireless communication, comprising:
receiving an assignment of an offset for a user device, the offset being varied based on a predetermined pattern and being one of a plurality of offsets available for transmission of single-carrier frequency division multiple-access (FDMA) symbols, each of the plurality of offsets being associated with a different starting subcarrier among a plurality of subcarriers available for transmission of single-carrier FDMA symbols, and
sending at least one single-carrier FDMA symbol based on the assignment.
61. An apparatus for wireless communication, comprising:
means for receiving an assignment of an offset for a user device, the offset being varied based on a predetermined pattern and being one of a plurality of offsets available for transmission of single-carrier frequency division multiple-access (FDMA) symbols, each of the plurality of offsets being associated with a different starting subcarrier among a plurality of subcarriers available for transmission of single-carrier FDMA symbols, and
means for sending at least one single-carrier FDMA symbol based on the assignment.
43. An apparatus for wireless communication, comprising:
a processor configured to:
receive an assignment of an offset for a user device, the offset being varied based on a predetermined pattern and being one of a plurality of offsets available for transmission of single-carrier frequency division multiple-access (FDMA) symbols, each of the plurality of offsets being associated with a different starting subcarrier among a plurality of subcarriers available for transmission of single-carrier FDMA symbols, and
send at least one single-carrier FDMA symbol based on the assignment.
1. An apparatus for wireless communication, comprising:
a memory configured to store information related to a plurality of offsets available for transmission of single-carrier frequency division multiple-access (FDMA) symbols, each of the plurality of offsets being associated with a different starting subcarrier among a plurality of subcarriers available for transmission of single-carrier FDMA symbols; and
a processor coupled with the memory, the processor configured to assign an offset to a user device and to vary the offset for the user device based on a predetermined pattern.
70. A non-transitory computer-readable medium having stored thereon computer-executable instructions for:
receiving an assignment of an offset for a user device, the offset being varied based on a predetermined pattern and being one of a plurality of offsets available for transmission of single-carrier frequency division multiple-access (FDMA) symbols, each of the plurality of offsets being associated with a different starting subcarrier among a plurality of subcarriers available for transmission of single-carrier FDMA symbols, and
sending at least one single-carrier FDMA symbol based on the assignment.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the processor is further configured to utilize a channel tree with a plurality of nodes, to assign a node in the channel tree to the user device, and to determine the offset for the user device based on the node assigned to the user device.
3. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein the channel tree is a non-binary channel tree with each non-leaf node having one or more child nodes.
4. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein each child node in the channel tree is assigned a non-binary value.
5. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein the processor is further configured to determine a path between the node assigned to the user device and a root node in the channel tree and to determine the offset for the user device based on the path.
6. The apparatus of claim 5, wherein the processor is further configured to determine a value of the path based on values of nodes in the path and to determine the offset for the user device based on the value of the path.
7. The apparatus of claim 6, wherein the processor is further configured to perform a table lookup to identify an offset corresponding to the value of the path and to assign the identified offset to the user device.
8. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein the processor is further configured to vary the offset for the user device by periodically changing assignments of values to one or more nodes in the channel tree.
9. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the processor is further configured to determine a number of subcarriers to assign to the user device.
10. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the processor is further configured to determine the offset for the user device employing an interleaved FDMA (IFDMA) communication protocol.
11. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the processor is further configured to determine the offset for the user device employing a localized FDMA (LFDMA) communication protocol.
12. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the processor is further configured to periodically vary the offset for the user device.
13. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the processor is further configured to employ symbol rate hopping and to vary the offset for the user device upon transmission of each single-carrier FDMA symbol by the user device.
14. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the processor is further configured to employ block hopping and to vary the offset for the user device upon transmission of a block of single-carrier FDMA symbols by the user device.
16. The method of claim 15, further comprising:
assigning a node in a channel tree to the user device; and
determining the offset for the user device based on the node assigned to the user device.
17. The method of claim 16, further comprising:
determining a path between the node assigned to the user device and a root node in the channel tree; and
determining the offset for the user device based on the path.
18. The method of claim 17, further comprising:
determining a value of the path based on values of nodes in the path; and
determining the offset for the user device based on the value of the path.
19. The method of claim 15, further comprising:
determining a number of subcarriers to assign to the user device.
20. The method of claim 15, wherein the varying the offset comprises varying the offset for the user device upon transmission of a block of single-carrier FDMA symbols by the user device.
22. The apparatus of claim 21, further comprising:
means for assigning a node in a channel tree to the user device; and
means for determining the offset for the user device based on the node assigned to the user device.
23. The apparatus of claim 22, further comprising:
means for determining a path between the node assigned to the user device and a root node in the channel tree; and
means for determining the offset for the user device based on the path.
24. The apparatus of claim 23, further comprising:
means for determining a value of the path based on values of nodes in the path; and
means for determining the offset for the user device based on the value of the path.
25. The apparatus of claim 21, further comprising:
means for determining a number of subcarriers to assign to the user device.
26. The apparatus of claim 21, wherein the means for varying the offset comprises means for varying the offset for the user device upon transmission of a block of single-carrier FDMA symbols by the user device.
28. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the processor is further configured to:
assign a first set of subcarriers determined based on the offset to the user device, and
assign a second set of subcarriers determined based on the varied offset to the user device.
29. The apparatus of claim 28, wherein the first and second sets of subcarriers are constrained to a portion of system bandwidth.
30. The apparatus of claim 28, wherein the first and second sets include an equal number of subcarriers determined based on a subcarrier set size allocated to the user device and selected from among a plurality of supported subcarrier set sizes.
31. The apparatus of claim 28, wherein the processor is further configured to:
receive at least one localized frequency division multiple-access (LFDMA) symbol sent on the first set of subcarriers by the user device, and
receive at least one additional LFDMA symbol sent on the second set of subcarriers by the user device.
32. The apparatus of claim 28, wherein the processor is further configured to:
receive at least one interleaved frequency division multiple-access (IFDMA) symbol sent on the first set of subcarriers by the user device, and
receive at least one additional IFDMA symbol sent on the second set of subcarriers by the user device.
33. The method of claim 15, further comprising:
assigning a first set of subcarriers determined based on the offset to the user device; and
assigning a second set of subcarriers determined based on the varied offset to the user device.
34. The method of claim 33, wherein the first and second sets of subcarriers are constrained to a portion of system bandwidth.
35. The method of claim 33, wherein the first and second sets include an equal number of subcarriers determined based on a subcarrier set size allocated to the user device and selected from among a plurality of supported subcarrier set sizes.
36. The method of claim 33, further comprising:
receiving at least one localized frequency division multiple-access (LFDMA) symbol sent on the first set of subcarriers by the user device; and
receiving at least one additional LFDMA symbol sent on the second set of subcarriers by the user device.
37. The method of claim 33, wherein the processor is further configured to:
receiving at least one interleaved frequency division multiple-access (IFDMA) symbol sent on the first set of subcarriers by the user device; and
receiving at least one additional IFDMA symbol sent on the second set of subcarriers by the user device.
38. The apparatus of claim 21, further comprising:
means for assigning a first set of subcarriers determined based on the offset to the user device; and
means for assigning a second set of subcarriers determined based on the varied offset to the user device.
39. The apparatus of claim 38, wherein the first and second sets of subcarriers are constrained to a portion of system bandwidth.
40. The apparatus of claim 38, wherein the first and second sets include an equal number of subcarriers determined based on a subcarrier set size allocated to the user device and selected from among a plurality of supported subcarrier set sizes.
41. The apparatus of claim 38, further comprising:
means for receiving at least one localized frequency division multiple-access (LFDMA) symbol sent on the first set of subcarriers by the user device; and
means for receiving at least one additional LFDMA symbol sent on the second set of subcarriers by the user device.
42. The apparatus of claim 38, further comprising:
means for receiving at least one interleaved frequency division multiple-access (IFDMA) symbol sent on the first set of subcarriers by the user device; and
means for receiving at least one additional IFDMA symbol sent on the second set of subcarriers by the user device.
44. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the offset for the user device is varied periodically.
45. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the offset for the user device is varied upon transmission of each single-carrier FDMA symbol by the user device.
46. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the offset for the user device is varied upon transmission of a block of single-carrier FDMA symbols by the user device.
47. The apparatus of claim 43, wherein the processor is further configured to:
determine a first set of subcarriers assigned to the user device based on the offset for the user device, and
determine a second set of subcarriers assigned to the user device based on a varied offset for the user device.
48. The apparatus of claim 47, wherein the first and second sets of subcarriers are constrained to a portion of system bandwidth.
49. The apparatus of claim 47, wherein the first and second sets include an equal number of subcarriers determined based on a subcarrier set size allocated to the user device and selected from among a plurality of supported subcarrier set sizes.
50. The apparatus of claim 47, wherein the processor is further configured to:
send at least one localized frequency division multiple-access (LFDMA) symbol on the first set of subcarriers, and
send at least one additional LFDMA symbol on the second set of subcarriers.
51. The apparatus of claim 47, wherein the processor is further configured to:
send at least one interleaved frequency division multiple-access (IFDMA) symbol on the first set of subcarriers, and
send at least one additional IFDMA symbol on the second set of subcarriers.
53. The method of claim 52, wherein the offset for the user device is varied periodically.
54. The method of claim 52, wherein the offset for the user device is varied upon transmission of each single-carrier FDMA symbol by the user device.
55. The method of claim 52, wherein the offset for the user device is varied upon transmission of a block of single-carrier FDMA symbols by the user device.
56. The method of claim 52, further comprising:
determining a first set of subcarriers assigned to the user device based on the offset for the user device, and
determining a second set of subcarriers assigned to the user device based on a varied offset for the user device.
57. The method of claim 56, wherein the first and second sets of subcarriers are constrained to a portion of system bandwidth.
58. The method of claim 56, wherein the first and second sets include an equal number of subcarriers determined based on a subcarrier set size allocated to the user device and selected from among a plurality of supported subcarrier set sizes.
59. The method of claim 56, wherein the sending at least one single-carrier FDMA symbol comprises
sending at least one localized frequency division multiple-access (LFDMA) symbol on the first set of subcarriers, and
sending at least one additional LFDMA symbol on the second set of subcarriers.
60. The method of claim 56, wherein the sending at least one single-carrier FDMA symbol comprises
sending at least one interleaved frequency division multiple-access (IFDMA) symbol on the first set of subcarriers, and
sending at least one additional IFDMA symbol on the second set of subcarriers.
62. The apparatus of claim 61, wherein the offset for the user device is varied periodically.
63. The apparatus of claim 61, wherein the offset for the user device is varied upon transmission of each single-carrier FDMA symbol by the user device.
64. The apparatus of claim 61, wherein the offset for the user device is varied upon transmission of a block of single-carrier FDMA symbols by the user device.
65. The apparatus of claim 61, further comprising:
means for determining a first set of subcarriers assigned to the user device based on the offset for the user device, and
means for determining a second set of subcarriers assigned to the user device based on a varied offset for the user device.
66. The apparatus of claim 65, wherein the first and second sets of subcarriers are constrained to a portion of system bandwidth.
67. The apparatus of claim 65, wherein the first and second sets include an equal number of subcarriers determined based on a subcarrier set size allocated to the user device and selected from among a plurality of supported subcarrier set sizes.
68. The apparatus of claim 65, wherein the means for sending at least one single-carrier FDMA symbol comprises
means for sending at least one localized frequency division multiple-access (LFDMA) symbol on the first set of subcarriers, and
means for sending at least one additional LFDMA symbol on the second set of subcarriers.
69. The apparatus of claim 65, wherein the means for sending at least one single-carrier FDMA symbol comprises
means for sending at least one interleaved frequency division multiple-access (IFDMA) symbol on the first set of subcarriers, and
means for sending at least one additional IFDMA symbol on the second set of subcarriers.

This present Application for Patent is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/209,246, entitled “FREQUENCY HOPPING DESIGN FOR SINGLE CARRIER FDMA SYSTEMS”, filed Aug. 22, 2005, pending, which is assigned to the assignee of the present application and claims benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/672,575, entitled “FREQUENCY HOPPING IN INTERLEAVED FREQUENCY DIVISION MULTIPLE ACCESS COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS,” filed Apr. 19, 2005, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/691,755, entitled “FREQUENCY HOPPING DESIGN FOR SINGLE CARRIER FDMA SYSTEMS”, filed Jun. 16, 2005, all of which are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.

The present Application for Patent is related to the following co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/173,873, filed Jun. 30, 2005 assigned to the assignee hereof, and expressly incorporated by reference herein.

I. Field

The following description relates generally to wireless communications, and more particularly to mitigating interference between user devices in nearby communication sectors by employing frequency hopping in a single carrier FDMA network environment.

II. Background

Wireless communication systems have become a prevalent means by which a majority of people worldwide has come to communicate. Wireless communication devices have become smaller and more powerful in order to meet consumer needs and to improve portability and convenience. The increase in processing power in mobile devices such as cellular telephones has lead to an increase in demands on wireless network transmission systems. Such systems typically are not as easily updated as the cellular devices that communicate there over. As mobile device capabilities expand, it can be difficult to maintain an older wireless network system in a manner that facilitates fully exploiting new and improved wireless device capabilities.

More particularly, frequency division based techniques typically separate the spectrum into distinct channels by splitting it into uniform chunks of bandwidth, for example, division of the frequency band allocated for wireless communication can be split into 30 channels, each of which can carry a voice conversation or, with digital service, carry digital data. Each channel can be assigned to only one user at a time. One known variant is an orthogonal frequency division technique that effectively partitions the overall system bandwidth into multiple orthogonal subbands. These subbands are also referred to as tones, carriers, subcarriers, bins, and frequency channels. Each subband is associated with a subcarrier that can be modulated with data. With time division based techniques, a band is split time-wise into sequential time slices or time slots. Each user of a channel is provided with a time slice for transmitting and receiving information in a round-robin manner. For example, at any given time t, a user is provided access to the channel for a short burst. Then, access switches to another user who is provided with a short burst of time for transmitting and receiving information. The cycle of “taking turns” continues, and eventually each user is provided with multiple transmission and reception bursts.

A typical wireless communication network (e.g., employing frequency, time, and code division techniques) includes one or more base stations that provide a coverage area and one or more mobile (e.g., wireless) terminals that can transmit and receive data within the coverage area. A typical base station can simultaneously transmit multiple data streams for broadcast, multicast, and/or unicast services, wherein a data stream is a stream of data that can be of independent reception interest to a mobile terminal. A mobile terminal within the coverage area of that base station can be interested in receiving one, more than one or all the data streams carried by the composite stream. Likewise, a mobile terminal can transmit data to the base station or another mobile terminal. Such communication between base station and mobile terminal or between mobile terminals can be degraded due to channel variations and/or interference power variations. For example, the aforementioned variations can affect base station scheduling, power control and/or rate prediction for one or more mobile terminals.

In the case of OFDMA-based systems, the particular waveforms and power required to transmit communication signals thereon typically exhibit an undesirably high peak-to-average ratio (PAR), which limits the coverage of OFDMA systems due to the inefficiencies of non-linear power amplifiers. Single carrier FDMA systems can mitigate problems associated with an undesirably high PAR, but are still subject to a variety of limitations that create a need in the art for a system and/or methodology of mitigating interference between mobile devices and/or sectors in such wireless network systems.

The following presents a simplified summary of one or more embodiments in order to provide a basic understanding of such embodiments. This summary is not an extensive overview of all contemplated embodiments, and is intended to neither identify key or critical elements of all embodiments nor delineate the scope of any or all embodiments. Its sole purpose is to present some concepts of one or more embodiments in a simplified form as a prelude to the more detailed description that is presented later.

According to an aspect, a method of generating transmission symbols can comprise generating at least one single-carrier FDMA symbol, assigning a set of subcarriers to transmit the at least one symbol, generating at least one other single carrier FDMA symbol, and varying subcarrier set assignments according to a predetermined pattern for transmission of the at least one other single-carrier FDMA symbol. Varying the subcarrier set assignments can comprise changing an assignment of at least one offset in a predetermined set of offsets. The predetermined pattern can be delineated by transmission of a number of frames, expiration of a time period, etc., and subcarrier set assignments can be varied at fixed intervals delineated by the transmission of a predetermined number of single-carrier FDMA symbols. Additionally, assigning subcarriers to a user device can comprise generating a channel tree including a plurality of nodes, assigning each child node a node value that represents a non-negative integer, and assigning a user device to a node in the channel tree to define the subcarrier set assigned to the user device.

According to another aspect, an apparatus that facilitates frequency hopping for single carrier FDMA communication can comprise a memory and a processor coupled with the memory, the processor configured to assign an offset to a user device and to vary the offset for the user device according to a predetermined pattern. Nodes in the channel tree can be assigned values, and the processor can read the channel tree along a path from the node assigned to the user device to the first child node of a root node in the channel tree and evaluate a value for the path. Additionally, the processor can be further configured to perform a table lookup to identify an offset corresponding to the value of the path from the node assigned to the user device to the root node and assigns to at least one of the user devices the identified offset. The user device can thus be assigned an offset corresponding to the value of the path to the node assigned to the user device from the root node. The processor can periodically permute node value assignments of one or more nodes in the channel tree to change the offset of the user device by changing the value of the path from the user-assigned node to the root node.

According to yet another aspect, an apparatus can comprise means for generating at least one single-carrier FDMA symbol, means for assigning a set of subcarriers to transmit the at least one symbol, means for generating at least one other single carrier FDMA symbol, and means for varying subcarrier set assignments, according to a predetermined pattern for transmission of the at least one other single-carrier FDMA symbol. The means for assigning can comprise means for allocating a node in a channel tree to the user device and means for assigning a value to each node in the channel tree and means for reading a path in the channel tree from an allocated user node to a root node to determine a value for nodes in the path that identifies the set of subcarriers to assign to the user device and a number of subcarriers to include in the set. The means for varying subcarrier set assignments can periodically alter values assigned to one or more nodes in the channel tree to vary the value of the path between the allocated user node and the root node. The means for assigning can assign a new set of subcarriers associated with the varied value of the path from the allocated user node to the root node upon variation by the means for varying subcarrier set assignments.

Yet another aspect relates to a computer-readable medium having stored thereon computer-executable instructions for assigning an offset-related entity to a user device and periodically varying the offset for the user device based at least in part on the assigned entity. The computer-readable medium can further comprise instructions for assigning a value to each node of a channel tree, allocating a node to at least one user device to assign a subcarrier set to the at least one user device, and permuting node values according to a pattern to change the subcarrier set assigned to the at least one user device.

Still another aspect relates to a wireless communication device that comprises a memory comprising information corresponding to a plurality of offset assignments for transmission of single-carrier FDMA symbols and a processor, coupled with the memory, the processor configured to vary the offset assignments according to a predetermined pattern based upon the information. The information can correspond to values for nodes of a channel tree, and the nodes can correspond to root nodes and child nodes. Additionally, the channel tree can be a non-binary channel tree wherein each node has one or more child nodes. Moreover, node values can correspond to values generated by reading the channel tree along a path from the node assigned to the user device to the first child node of a root node in the channel tree and evaluating a value for the path. Information related to node values, offsets, assignments, and the like can be stored in a look-up table in the wireless communication device.

To the accomplishment of the foregoing and related ends, the one or more embodiments comprise the features hereinafter fully described and particularly pointed out in the claims. The following description and the annexed drawings set forth in detail certain illustrative aspects of the one or more embodiments. These aspects are indicative, however, of but a few of the various ways in which the principles of various embodiments may be employed and the described embodiments are intended to include all such aspects and their equivalents.

FIG. 1 illustrates a binary channel tree that can be employed in conjunction with a single carrier FDMA network to facilitate varying user device offsets in accordance with various aspects.

FIG. 2 is an illustration of a binary channel tree that facilitates determining an offset for a user in a single carrier FDMA wireless communication environment in accordance with various aspects.

FIG. 3 is an illustration of a non-binary channel tree wherein user devices are allocated nodes in the tree and each node is assigned a value in accordance with various aspects.

FIG. 4 illustrates a system that facilitates frequency hopping in a single carrier FDMA wireless communication environment in accordance with one or more aspects.

FIG. 5 is an illustration of a system that facilitates employing a frequency hopping technique in a single carrier FDMA environment, such as an IFDMA wireless communication environment in accordance with various aspects.

FIG. 6 is an illustration of a system that facilitates employing a frequency hopping technique in a single carrier FDMA environment, such as an LFDMA wireless communication environment in accordance with various aspects.

FIG. 7 is an illustration of a system that facilitates frequency hopping in a single carrier FDMA wireless communication environment in accordance with various aspects.

FIG. 8 is an illustration of a system that facilitates frequency hopping technique in an FDMA wireless communication environment in accordance with various aspects.

FIG. 9 is an illustration of a methodology for generating a signal using an IFDMA protocol, such as can be employed in conjunction with a frequency hopping protocol to improve interference diversity.

FIG. 10 is an illustration of a methodology for performing frequency hopping in conjunction with an IFDMA modulation protocol in accordance with one or more aspects.

FIG. 11 illustrates a methodology for generating a signal using an LFDMA protocol, such as can be employed in conjunction with a frequency hopping protocol in accordance with one or more aspects.

FIG. 12 illustrates a methodology for altering offset assignments for users in an LFDMA wireless communication environment in accordance with one or more aspects.

FIG. 13 is an illustration of a wireless network environment that can be employed in conjunction with the various systems and methods described herein in accordance with one or more aspects.

Various embodiments are now described with reference to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals are used to refer to like elements throughout. In the following description, for purposes of explanation, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of one or more embodiments. It may be evident, however, that such embodiment(s) may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known structures and devices are shown in block diagram form in order to facilitate describing one or more embodiments.

As used in this application, the terms “component,” “system,” and the like are intended to refer to a computer-related entity, either hardware, a combination of hardware and software, software, or software in execution. For example, a component may be, but is not limited to being, a process running on a processor, a processor, an object, an executable, a thread of execution, a program, and/or a computer. One or more components may reside within a process and/or thread of execution and a component may be localized on one computer and/or distributed between two or more computers. Also, these components can execute from various computer readable media having various data structures stored thereon. The components may communicate by way of local and/or remote processes such as in accordance with a signal having one or more data packets (e.g., data from one component interacting with another component in a local system, distributed system, and/or across a network such as the Internet with other systems by way of the signal).

Furthermore, various embodiments are described herein in connection with a subscriber station. A subscriber station can also be called a system, a subscriber unit, mobile station, mobile, remote station, access point, base station, remote terminal, access terminal, user terminal, user agent, a user device, or user equipment. A subscriber station may be a cellular telephone, a cordless telephone, a Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) phone, a wireless local loop (WLL) station, a personal digital assistant (PDA), a handheld device having wireless connection capability, or other processing device connected to a wireless modem.

Moreover, various aspects or features described herein may be implemented as a method, apparatus, or article of manufacture using standard programming and/or engineering techniques. The term “article of manufacture” as used herein is intended to encompass a computer program accessible from any computer-readable device, carrier, or media. For example, computer readable media can include but are not limited to magnetic storage devices (e.g., hard disk, floppy disk, magnetic strips . . . ), optical disks (e.g., compact disk (CD), digital versatile disk (DVD) . . . ), smart cards, flash memory devices (e.g., card, stick, key drive . . . ), and integrated circuits such as read only memories, programmable read only memories, and electrically erasable programmable read only memories.

In order to facilitate frequency hopping, a single carrier FDMA modulation technique can be employed in a wireless network. For example, interleaved frequency division multiplexing (IFDM) can be employed to retain the benefits associated with orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) protocols. In addition, in some cases, single carrier FDMA modulation techniques may have a lower peak-to-average (PAR) ratio problem compared with OFDM. Similarly, according to a related aspect, localized frequency division multiplexing (LFDM) can be employed, which can also exhibit a lower PAR while retaining other benefits associated with OFDM protocols. LFDMA is also known as “narrow-band” FDMA, Classical FDMA, or just FDMA, and is a single carrier FDMA protocol.

OFDMA modulation symbols are in the frequency domain, and therefore the time domain signal obtained by performing a fast Fourier technique on the modulation symbol sequence can have an undesirably high PAR. By comparison, IFDMA modulation symbols are in the time domain, and therefore IFDMA modulation techniques do not exhibit the high PARs typically associated with OFDMA techniques. Thus, IFDMA (and similarly LFDMA) modulation protocols reduce undesirably high PAR and problems associated therewith.

In an IFDMA system, a total of NFFT subcarriers can be utilized, which are divided among a plurality of users. Each user can be allocated N carriers (where N can vary from user to user), as well as a user-specific subcarrier offset, U. Thus, a user with offset U occupies carriers {U, U+NFFT/N, U+2NFFT/N . . . U+(N−1)NFFT/N}. For example, in an IFDMA system a total of NFFT subcarriers can be divided among several users. Each user can be allocated N carriers (where N can vary from user device to user device), as well as a user device-specific subcarrier offset, U, where 0≦U<NFFT/N. When a user device transmits N modulation symbols [d0 d1 d2 . . . dN-1], the user device constructs an IFDMA symbol by performing the following acts:

A resulting IFDMA symbol can then be converted to an analog symbol modulated using a carrier and transmitted in a manner similar to that in which an OFDMA symbol is transmitted. The foregoing is illustrative of IFDMA symbol generation on both a reverse link and a forward link. Additionally, since the IFDMA signal is periodic in the time domain (with the exception of the phase, e−jkΦU), the signal can occupy a “comb” in frequency (e.g., only a set of N equally spaced subcarriers have a non-zero power, . . . ). More specifically, a user with offset U occupies the set of subcarriers {U, U+NFFT/N, U+2NFFT/N . . . U+(N−1)NFFT/N}, wherein the total set of subcarriers is indexed from 0 to NFFT−1, such that user device orthogonality can be maintained because user devices with different offsets occupy different subcarrier sets.

Similarly, in an LFDMA system, a user can be allocated a number N of contiguous subcarriers (e.g., subcarriers that are consecutive in the frequency domain, . . . ). For example, a total of NFFT subcarriers can exist, which can be divided among several users. Each user can be allocated a user-specific subcarrier offset, U, such that a user with offset U occupies carriers [U, U+1, . . . , U+N−1]. a user can be allocated a number N of contiguous subcarriers (e.g., subcarriers that are consecutive in the frequency domain, . . . ). Each user can be allocated N contiguous carriers (where N can vary from user device to user device), as well as a user-specific subcarrier offset, U, where 0≦U<NFFT−N, and where the total set of subcarriers is indexed from 0 to NFFT−1. A user that transmits a set of N modulation symbols [d0 d1 d2 . . . dN-1] can generate a transmission signal by performing the following acts:

Referring now to the drawings, FIG. 1 illustrates a binary channel tree 100 that can be employed in conjunction with a single carrier FDMA network to facilitate varying user device offsets in accordance with various aspects. The tree 100 comprises a plurality of nodes, each of which can be associated with a user device. For example, a first node 102 is associated with user A, and nodes 104 and 106 are assigned to users B and C, respectively. Various embodiments described herein facilitate changing user offsets, e.g. hopping sets of offset subcarriers. User offset variations can be performed using symbol rate hopping techniques (e.g., varied upon transmission of each symbol), block hopping techniques (e.g., varied upon transmission of a plurality of symbols), and the like. Additionally, a lookup table comprising information related to offsets, subcarrier sets, etc., can be employed to facilitate assigning and varying assignment of offsets to users. Offset assignment variation can be performed according to a predefined pattern, such as upon transmission of a single symbol, a predetermined number of symbols, a variable number of symbols, a fixed or variable time period, a fixed or variable number of frames, etc.

When employing an IFDMA protocol or an LFDMA protocol, in a system with NFFT=2n assignable subcarriers, a particular user may be allotted N=2m subcarriers (where m is less than or equal to n). Additionally, different users can have different values of m. The binary tree 100 can facilitate assigning user offsets despite the variance of m between users. For instance, each user can be assigned a node in the tree 100 as described above. A tree-reading algorithm can be employed to compute an offset for a given user. Embodiments of such algorithms and approaches are discussed with regard to FIG. 2.

Additionally, in conjunction with various aspects set forth herein, offset assignment can be a function of a permutation protocol by which a predetermined set of offsets is permuted through nodes in a channel tree, and thus permuted through a set of user devices, allocated to nodes in the channel tree. For instance, nodes in channel tree 100 can be assigned a first set of offsets, and such offset assignments can be varied according to a predetermined pattern (e.g., every frame, every 2 frames, every symbol or group thereof, every one or more nanoseconds, etc.). Additionally, permutation protocols, predetermined offset sets, schedules, and the like can be unique to individual sectors and/or regions in a wireless network.

FIG. 2 is an illustration of a binary channel tree 200 that facilitates determining an offset for a user in a single carrier FDMA wireless communication environment in accordance with various aspects. Tree 200 comprises a plurality of nodes, each of which has either a “0” value or “1” value. Nodes can be assigned to users of the wireless network, and offsets for each user can be evaluated by reading tree 200 in either an upward or downward direction.

For example, when employing an IFDMA protocol in conjunction with the wireless network, a “0” and a “1” are assigned to each child of a parent node. The assignment can vary from time to time and from sector to sector, in order to facilitate frequency hopping and interference diversity. The offset, U, of each user of the IFDMA-based network is the sequence read upward from the user-assigned node, wherein the user-assigned node represents the most significant bit in the offset U, and the root node's child node represents the least significant bit in the offset U. Thus, user A has offset 1, because it is assigned the first child node of the root node. User B has offset 0, as the most significant bit in user B's offset is a “0” and is read upward through the “0” child node of the root node, for an overall value of “00.” User C has offset 2, as user C is assigned a “1” node that is read upward through the “0” child node of the root node for a total value of 10 binary, or 2 decimal. Information related to offsets associated with user-assigned nodes can be retrieved from a lookup table comprising such information upon assignment of a particular offset to a user.

Additionally, user device node allocation can be related to a number of subcarriers required by the particular user device. For instance, user A is allocated to a first child node in tree 200 such that there are two bits in user A's lineage (e.g., user A's allocated child node and the root node). In a scenario in which NFFT is 512 (e.g. a 9-bit-deep tree), user A can have a subcarrier requirement of at least NFFT/2. Users B and C have a lineage three bits long, including the root node, and so are positioned on a third binary bit that represents a decimal value of 4. Thus, users B and C's offsets can comprise a number of subcarriers equal to NFFT/4, and so on. It will be appreciated that the number of bits, nodes, users, total subcarriers, and the like described herein are illustrative in nature and should not be interpreted in a limiting sense and may also vary by the system design parameters. Rather, the various embodiments, aspects, systems, methods, techniques, etc., set forth herein can employ any suitable number of the above in order to achieve interference diversity and frequency hopping.

According to a related example, when employing an LFDMA protocol, the binary tree 200 can be read from top to bottom to determine a user's offset. Node assignments of “0” and “1” can vary with time and between sectors in a wireless network. Thus, an offset for a user is an n-bit quantity that can be padded with 0s for the least significant bits if necessary. When reading tree 200 in a downward direction, user A has offset 2 (e.g., 10 binary), user B has offset 0 (e.g., 00 binary), and user C has offset 1 (e.g., 01 binary). Information related to such offsets can be gleaned from a lookup table and can correspond to, in this example, NFFT/2, 0, and NFFT/4, respectively. Numbers of subcarriers associated with respective offsets can then be assigned to users.

It will be appreciated by one skilled in the art that although various embodiments described herein relate to IFDMA and LFDMA protocols, such embodiments can be employed in conjunction with any suitable OFDMA system. Additionally, the binary value assignments of some nodes and their ancestors can be performed on a sector-independent basis, such that a user allocated to such a node can retain the same offset regardless of which sector the user is in. In this manner, frequency reuse can be supported, for example when sectors do not use such nodes, while sectors that do employ such nodes can allocate weaker users thereto.

FIG. 3 is an illustration of a non-binary channel tree 300 wherein user devices are allocated nodes in the tree and each node is assigned a value in accordance with various aspects. Non-binary channel tree 300 is similar to the binary assignment tree described with regard to FIG. 2. However, node assignments within channel tree 300 are not limited to binary values of 1 or 0, but rather can comprise any non-negative integer. For example, for a node having four children, the child nodes can be assigned values 0-3, (e.g., binary values 00, 01, 10, and 11, integer values of 0, 1, 2, and 3, etc.), while a parent node with only a pair of child nodes can have its children assigned values of 0 and 1, as set forth with regard to the binary channel tree of FIG. 2.

In non-binary channel tree 300, a number of subcarriers corresponding to a particular node can depend not only on the distance of the node to the root node, but also on the number of sibling nodes of each ancestor of the particular node. For instance, node A can have NFFT/16 carriers because node A's parent is one of four siblings, and therefore receives NFFT/4 subcarriers, which are then further divided into fourths among the four children of node A's parent (e.g., node A and its three siblings), which results in an assignment to node A of ¼ of NFFT/4, or NFFT/16 subcarriers. Node B can be assigned NFFT/8 subcarriers because it has one sibling and its parent is one of four siblings. Thus, node B can be assigned ½ of its parent's NFFT/4 subcarrier assignment, or NFFT/8 subcarriers. Nodes C and D, being nodes in a set of four siblings directly pendant from the root node of non-binary channel tree 300, can each receive a subcarrier assignment equal to NFFT/4. Information related to nodal relationships, offsets and/or subcarrier sets, and the like, can be stored in a lookup table that can be traversed in order to determine a user's assigned offset. It will be appreciated that the non-binary channel tree can be employed to facilitate assigning either or both of IFDMA and LFDMA subcarrier sets.

When performing offset computation in conjunction with an IFDMA communication environment, offsets can be computed by reading channel tree 300 from bottom to top. For instance, node A has an offset of 1101 when read through its parent toward the root node, and can be assigned offset 13 comprising NFFT/16 subcarriers. Node D can receive offset 2 (e.g., 10 binary). It will be noted that nodes B and C are depicted as having offset values of 3 (e.g., 011, and 11, respectively). In such a scenario, both nodes can be assigned offset 3, and will not be assigned such offset simultaneously, but rather alternately in order to mitigate conflict.

In an LFDMA communication environment, offsets can be computed by reading the non-binary channel tree 300 from top to bottom (e.g., from a root node down through to a particular child node). A 0-padding technique can be employed to pad the offset values read from the root node to the child node based at least in part on a value of NFFT. For example, if NFFT=512, then a total of 9 bits are required to represent NFFT as a binary number. 0-padding can be employed to pad each offset read with zeros until the offset is a 9-bit value. For example, A has an offset of 0111 when read from the root node to node A, which can be padded with 5 zeros to make A's offset a 9-bit number, 0111-00000=224. Thus node A can be assigned offset 224, which, according to the example, will comprise 512/16, or 32, carriers. Similarly, node B has offset 011-000000=192, node C has offset 11-0000000=384, and node D has offset 10-0000000=256. Described more generally, node A has an offset equal to 9NFFT/16, node B is assigned offset to 3NFFT/8, node C is assigned offset to 3NFFT/4, and node D is assigned offset to NFFT/2.

It will be appreciated that non-binary channel tree 300 can employ a set of predetermined offsets that can be permuted among user devices and/or nodes as described above with regard to FIG. 1. Additionally, changing the offsets can be performed according to a predetermined pattern, (e.g., every frame, every symbol, upon expiration of a time period, etc.) and such schedules can be sector-specific.

With respect to FIGS. 1-3, the assignments and hopping sequences of the nodes may be transmitted from a base station to a user device in initialization over time. This may be updated as appropriate. For example, assignments can be determined by reading the look-up tables at the user device for transmission to the base station, uplink, and for reception at the user device, downlink, based upon instructions transmitted from the base station. The instructions may, according to an aspect, comprise an identifier of a sequence, which may be repeated depending on the length of sequence that is stored at the user device. In other aspects, the node values may be updated regularly, based upon control channel messages from the base station.

In some embodiments, the channel assignments and single carrier transmissions may only apply to the uplink while the downlink transmissions use one or more OFDM schemes. In these cases, one or more OFDM type access schemes may be utilized on the downlink that are independent from the schemes utilized on the uplink.

FIG. 4 illustrates a system 400 that facilitates frequency hopping in a single carrier FDMA wireless communication environment in accordance with one or more aspects. A frequency hopping component 402 is operatively associated with a base station 408 (e.g., an access point). Wireless network 404 can comprise one or more base stations 408 in one or more sectors and/or regions comprising a plurality of sectors, etc., as will be appreciated by one skilled in the art. User devices 406 can comprise, without being limited to, cellular phones, smartphones, PDAs, laptop computers, personal computers, and/or any other suitable device with which a user can communicate over wireless network 404. A separate frequency hopping component 410 resides at the user device 406 and can vary the offsets according to instructions from frequency hopping component 402.

Frequency hopping component 402 can vary node value assignments for one or more user devices 406 allocated to nodes in a channel tree, such as the trees described with regard to FIGS. 1, 2, and 3. Node values (e.g., non-binary, binary, etc.) can be assigned to nodes in the channel tree and the tree can be traversed to determine an overall offset assignment. In the case of a binary channel tree, child nodes of each parent node in the channel tree can be assigned a 1 and a 0, such that each parent node has a 1-child and a 0-child. User devices 406 can be allocated to such nodes, and, depending on the particular single carrier FDMA protocol employed, frequency hopping component 402 can read the binary tree to evaluate user offset assignments and can evaluate a lookup table comprising information related to respective offsets (e.g., offset identity, subcarrier number, . . . ). Additionally, frequency hopping component 402 can change node value assignments (e.g., 1s and 0s and/or other binary node values, non-binary node values, etc.) for different sectors and at different times in order to facilitate frequency hopping and alteration of user offset assignments. It is to be appreciated that frequency hopping component 402 can be integral to one or more base stations 408 in wireless network 404 and/or to user device(s) 406.

While FIG. 4, depicts the frequency hopping component 402 as residing in the base station, it should be noted that frequency hopping component 402 may be implemented as a combination of functionality in both base station 408, a base station controller (not shown), or the like of wireless network 404, and in user device 406 (e.g., frequency hopping component 410). In such aspects, it may be possible to contain separate look-up tables in user device 406 and base station 408 which each correspond to offsets, which are known to both devices, e.g. by instructions from base station 408 that corresponds to user device 406, or some other means.

In various embodiments, where the frequency hopping component 402 resides in the base station 408, the user device 406 may have a look-up table that corresponds to a sequence for varying the offset U based upon instructions, commands, or the like transmitted from the base station 408 and generated by frequency hopping component 402.

FIG. 5 is an illustration of a system 500 that facilitates employing a frequency hopping technique in a single carrier FDMA environment, such as an IFDMA wireless communication environment in accordance with one or more aspects. A frequency hopping component 502 is operatively associated with and integral to a base station 508. A separate frequency hopping component 512 resides at the user device 506 and will vary the offsets according to instructions from frequency hopping component 502.

Additionally, frequency hopping components 502 and 512 are respectively associated with an IFDMA components 510 and 514, which facilitates wireless communication using an IFDMA protocol. For example, in an IFDMA system a total of NFFT subcarriers can be divided among several user devices 506. Each user device 506 can be allocated N carriers (where N can vary from user device to user device), as well as a user device-specific subcarrier offset, U, where 0≦U<NFFT/N. When a user device 506 transmits N modulation symbols [d0 d1 d2 . . . dN-1], user device 506 constructs an IFDMA symbol by performing the following acts:

A resulting IFDMA symbol can then be converted to an analog symbol modulated using a carrier and transmitted. The foregoing is illustrative of IFDMA symbol generation on both a reverse link and a forward link. Additionally, since the IFDMA signal is periodic in the time domain (with the exception of the phase, e−jkΦU), the signal can occupy a “comb” in frequency (e.g., only a set of N equally spaced subcarriers have a non-zero power, . . . ). More specifically, a user device 506 with offset U occupies the set of subcarriers {U, U+NFFT/N, U+2NFFT/N . . . U+(N−1)NFFT/N}, wherein the total set of subcarriers is indexed from 0 to NFFT−1, such that user device orthogonality can be maintained because user devices with different offsets occupy different subcarrier sets. Frequency hopping component 502 can generate, or store look-up tables that correspond to, offsets, node value assignments, etc., and can assign user devices 506 to nodes as described with regard to FIGS. 1-3. Additionally, where an IFDMA protocol is utilized, frequency hopping component 502 can read the tree from the root node downward to identify a particular user device's offset U. It is to be appreciated that the manner of assigning user devices to particular nodes can encompass arbitrary assignments, node assignments in a channel tree using non-binary node values, binary node values, or any other suitable manner of associating offsets with nodes and/or user devices 506. Moreover, it will be understood that node value assignments can be varied arbitrarily, randomly, according to a predetermined pattern and/or upon an occurrence of an event (e.g. transmission of one or more symbols, one or more frames, expiration of a time period, . . . ) etc.

While FIG. 5 depicts the frequency hopping component 502 as residing in the base station, it should be noted that frequency hopping component 502 may be implemented as a combination of functionality in both base station 508, base station controller (not shown) and in user device 506 (e.g., frequency hopping component 512). In such aspects, it may be possible to contain separate look-up tables in user device 506 and base station 508 which each correspond to sequences for offset U for the user device, which are known to both devices, e.g. by instructions from base station 508 that corresponds to user device 506, or some other means.

In the embodiments, where the frequency hopping component 502 resides in the base station 508, the user device 506 may have a look-up table that corresponds to a sequence for varying the offset U based upon instructions, commands, or the like transmitted from the base station 508 and generated by frequency hopping component 502.

FIG. 6 is an illustration of a system 600 that facilitates employing a frequency hopping technique in a single carrier FDMA environment, such as an LFDMA wireless communication environment in accordance with one or more aspects. System 600 comprises a frequency hopping component 602 that is operatively associated with an access point 608. A separate frequency hopping component 614 resides at the user device 606 and will vary the offsets according to instructions from frequency hopping component 602.

Frequency hopping component 602 can be further operatively associated with an IFDMA component 610 that facilitates communication over wireless network 604 as described above with regard to FIG. 5. Additionally and/or alternatively, frequency hopping component 602 can be further operatively coupled to an LFDMA component 612, which can facilitate LFDMA communication between base station 608 and user device 606. Similarly, frequency hopping component 614 can be operatively coupled to an IFDMA component 616 and an LFDMA component 618 in user device 606. Frequency hopping component 602 can generate a channel tree for offset assignment to user device 606, such that each of a plurality of user devices 606 can be allocated to a node in the offset tree. Each node in the tree can have a value, and such node values can be changed by frequency hopping component 602 from time to time and/or from sector to sector to provide interference diversity and frequency hopping functionality. Upon a determination of a value associated with a particular node, frequency hopping component 602 can perform a table lookup to evaluate an associated offset for assignment to a user device 606.

With regard to LFDMA components 612 and 618, a user device 606 can be allocated a number N of contiguous subcarriers (e.g., subcarriers that are consecutive in the frequency domain, . . . ). For example, in an LFDMA system a total of NFFT subcarriers can be divided among several user devices 606. Each user device 606 can be allocated N contiguous carriers (where N can vary from user device to user device), as well as a user device-specific subcarrier offset, U, where 0≦U<NFFT−N, and where the total set of subcarriers is indexed from 0 to NFFT−1. A user device that transmits a set of N modulation symbols [d0 d1 d2 . . . dN-1] can generate a transmission signal by performing the following acts:

In the above example of LFDMA signal generation, different user devices 606 can be allocated disjoint sets of subcarriers to ensure that user devices 606 are orthogonal to each other. Frequency hopping component 602 can then generate an assignment tree and evaluate assignments of user devices 606 to nodes therein as described with regard to FIGS. 1-3, and, where an LFDMA protocol is utilized, can read the tree from the root node downward to identify a particular user device's offset, U.

While FIG. 6 depicts frequency hopping component 602 as residing in the base station, it should be noted that frequency hopping component 602 may be implemented as a combination of functionality in both base station 608, base station controller (not shown), or the like of wireless network 604, and in user device 606 (e.g., frequency hopping component 614). In such aspects, it may be possible to contain separate look-up tables in user device 606 and base station 608, which each correspond to sequences for offset U for the user device 606, which are known to both devices, e.g. by instructions from base station 608 that corresponds to the user device 606, or some other means.

In the embodiments, where the frequency hopping component 602 resides in the base station 608, the user device 606 may have a look-up table that corresponds to a sequence for varying the offset U based upon instructions, commands, or the like transmitted from the base station 608 and generated by frequency hopping component 602.

Additionally, IFDMA components 610 and 616 and LFDMA components 612 and 618 can be employed in conjunction with one another to facilitate generation of subcarrier assignments that comprise equally spaced subcarriers that span less than the total available bandwidth, in accordance with various aspects set forth herein. Moreover, fast hopping techniques can be employed, potentially over a fraction of the available bandwidth when employing an IFDMA protocol. On a typical OFDMA uplink, a user device can be assigned a set of subcarriers, which is kept constant for a time to permit the user device to estimate the channel over that set of subcarriers. However, if the user device's assignment is large enough that the user device can estimate the channel over the entire bandwidth, then a symbol rate hopping protocol (e.g., varying a subcarrier set assignment for a user device upon transmission of each symbol) can be utilized because there is no detriment in hopping upon each symbol.

FIG. 7 is an illustration of a system 700 that facilitates frequency hopping in a single carrier FDMA wireless network environment. A frequency hopping component 702 may be operatively associated with a base station 708 in a wireless network 704. A separate frequency hopping component 718 resides at the user device 706 and can vary the offsets according to instructions from frequency hopping component 702.

Wireless network 704 can comprise one or more base stations 708 in one or more sectors and/or regions comprising a plurality of sectors, etc., as will be appreciated by one skilled in the art. User devices 706 can comprise, without being limited to, cellular phones, smartphones, PDAs, laptop computers, personal computers, and/or any other suitable device with which a user can communicate over wireless network 704. Frequency hopping component 702 in base station 708 can be associated with an IFDMA component 710 and/or an LFDMA component 712, or any other suitable single carrier FDMA system, to facilitate symbol generation as described above with regard to the preceding figures. Similarly, frequency hopping component 718 in user device 706 can be operatively coupled to each of an IFDMA component 720 and an LFDMA component 722.

Base station 708 and/or user device 706 can additionally and respectively comprise memories 714 and 724 that are operatively coupled to frequency hopping components 702 and 718, and that store information related to channel tree generation or pre-generated channel tree information that may be utilized, node value assignment (e.g., non-binary, binary, integer, etc.) of nodes in the channel tree, user device node allocation, tree-reading algorithms (e.g., top-down for LFDMA, bottom-up for IFDMA, . . . ), signal generation algorithms (e.g., for generating signals using IFDMA, LFDMA, single carrier FDMA, . . . ), time tables for node value assignment variation (e.g., frequency hopping, . . . ), lookup tables related to offset information and/or node value assignments, and any other suitable information related to providing interference diversity (e.g., frequency hopping) to mitigate interference of one or more user devices 706. Processors 716 and 726 can be operatively connected to frequency hopping components 702 and 718, respectively, and/or memories 714 and 724 to facilitate analysis of information related to frequency hopping, node assignment and/or allocation to one or more user devices 706, tree-reading algorithms, signal generation, and the like. It is to be appreciated that processor 716 can be a processor dedicated to analyzing and/or generating information received by frequency hopping component 702, a processor that controls one or more components of base station 708, and/or a processor that both analyzes and generates information received by frequency hopping component 702 and controls one or more components of base station 708. In a similar manner, processor 726 can be a processor dedicated to analyzing information received by frequency hopping component 718, a processor that controls one or more components of user device 706, and/or a processor that both analyzes information received by frequency hopping component 718 and controls one or more components user device 706.

Memories 714 and 724 can additionally store protocols associated with generating signals, symbols, channel trees, lookup tables, etc., such that user device 706 and/or base station 708 can employ stored protocols and/or algorithms to achieve interference diversity as described herein. It will be appreciated that the data store (e.g., memories) components described herein can be either volatile memory or nonvolatile memory, or can include both volatile and nonvolatile memory. By way of illustration, and not limitation, nonvolatile memory can include read only memory (ROM), programmable ROM (PROM), electrically programmable ROM (EPROM), electrically erasable ROM (EEPROM), or flash memory. Volatile memory can include random access memory (RAM), which acts as external cache memory. By way of illustration and not limitation, RAM is available in many forms such as synchronous RAM (SRAM), dynamic RAM (DRAM), synchronous DRAM (SDRAM), double data rate SDRAM (DDR SDRAM), enhanced SDRAM (ESDRAM), Synchlink DRAM (SLDRAM), and direct Rambus RAM (DRRAM). The memories 714 and 724 of the subject systems and methods is intended to comprise, without being limited to, these and any other suitable types of memory.

While FIG. 7 depicts frequency hopping component 702 as residing in the base station 708, it should be noted that frequency hopping component 702 may be implemented as a combination of functionality in both base station 708, base station controller (not shown), or the like of wireless network 704, and in user device 706 (e.g., frequency hopping component 718). In such aspects, it may be possible to contain separate look-up tables in user device 706 and base station 708 which each correspond to sequences for offset U for the user device, which are known to both devices, e.g. by instructions from base station 708 that corresponds to the user device 706, or some other means.

In the embodiments, where the frequency hopping component 702 resides in the base station 708, the user device 706 may have a look-up table that corresponds to a sequence for varying the offset U based upon instructions, commands, or the like transmitted from the base station 708 and generated by frequency hopping component 702.

FIG. 8 is an illustration of a system 800 that facilitates frequency hopping technique in an FDMA wireless network environment in accordance with various aspects. A frequency hopping component 802 is operatively associated with a base station 808. A separate frequency hopping component 824 resides at the user device 806 and can vary the offsets according to instructions from frequency hopping component 802.

Wireless network 804 can comprise one or more base stations 808, repeaters, transceivers, etc. (not shown) in one or more sectors and/or regions comprising a plurality of sectors, etc., as will be appreciated by one skilled in the art. User devices 806 can comprise, without being limited to, cellular phones, smartphones, PDAs, laptop computers, personal computers, and/or any other suitable device with which a user can communicate over wireless network 804. Frequency hopping component 802 in base station 808 can be operatively associated with an IFDMA component 810 and/or an LFDMA component 812, or any other suitable single carrier FDMA system, to facilitate communication symbol generation as described above with regard to the preceding figures. Likewise, frequency hopping component 824 in user device 806 can be operatively associated with either or both of an IFDMA component 826 and an LFDMA component 828. Frequency hopping component 802 can be further associated with an assignment component 820 in base station 808 that assigns nodes to user devices 806, based at least in part on offset information stored in a lookup table, which can be retained in memory 814 and/or memory 830. Such assignments can be transmitted to an assignment receiver 822 in user device 806 and decoded by frequency hopping component 824 in user device 806. Assignment component 820 can assign nodes in the channel tree to user devices, and frequency hopping component 802 can vary offsets (e.g., by permuting/changing node value assignments) to maintain offset diversity and facilitate mitigating interference between user devices 806 and/or network sectors over which user devices 806 communicate. Additionally, frequency hopping component 802 can assign node values to nodes in a binary channel tree, such as described with regard to FIG. 2, and/or to nodes in a non-binary channel tree, such as described with regard to FIG. 3, in order to facilitate providing offsets to user devices 806. Moreover, frequency hopping component 802 can employ a non-binary channel tree in conjunction with the permutation protocol to optimize interference reduction.

Frequency hopping component 802 can assign subcarrier sets (e.g., offsets) to user devices 806 for transmission of one or more symbols during a communication event, as described above. For example, frequency hopping component 802 can generate and/or transmit an offset assignment at a first point in time, and such assignment can be varied (e.g., by changing node value assignments) according to a predetermined pattern (e.g., after transmission/receipt of each symbol, group of symbols, one or more frames, . . . ). To further this example, subcarrier set assignments to user devices 806 can be varied after a predetermined period, which can be delineated by transmission of a fixed number of symbols (e.g., IFDMA symbols, LFDMA symbols, or any other suitable single-carrier FDMA symbols).

Assignment receiver 822 in user device 806 receives a subcarrier set assignment (e.g., an offset assignment) to permit user device 806 to exert control over an assigned set of subcarriers for transmission of one or more symbols (e.g., IFDMA, LFDMA, . . . ) during a communication event. Assignment receiver 822 can receive and/or accept a node assignment and an offset for device 806 can be determined at a first point in time. A second offset can then be determined and/or computed upon alteration of node value assignments after a predetermined time period (e.g., after transmission/receipt of each symbol, group of symbols, . . . ). According to this example, offset assignments to user device 806 can be varied (e.g., by varying node values for nodes to which user devices are assigned, etc.) after a predetermined period that can be delineated by transmission of a number of symbols (e.g., IFDMA symbols, LFDMA symbols, or any other suitable single-carrier FDMA symbols). Furthermore, base station 808 can employ a memory 814, a processor 816, and an AI component 818 to facilitate assignment, assignment variation, acknowledgement, utilization, and the like in conjunction with the various frequency hopping protocols described herein. User device 806 can employ a memory 830, processor 832, and AI component 834 for like purposes.

AI components 818 and 834 can be respectively and operatively associated with frequency hopping components 802 and 824 in either or both of base station 808 and user device 806, and can make inferences regarding channel tree generation, node value assignments and alterations thereto, user device 806 node allocation, etc. As used herein, the term to “infer” or “inference” refers generally to the process of reasoning about or inferring states of the system, environment, and/or user from a set of observations as captured via events and/or data. Inference can be employed to identify a specific context or action, or can generate a probability distribution over states, for example. The inference can be probabilistic—that is, the computation of a probability distribution over states of interest based on a consideration of data and events. Inference can also refer to techniques employed for composing higher-level events from a set of events and/or data. Such inference results in the construction of new events or actions from a set of observed events and/or stored event data, whether or not the events are correlated in close temporal proximity, and whether the events and data come from one or several event and data sources.

According to an example, AI components 818 and/or 834 can infer an appropriate tree structure for representing user device offsets based at least in part on, for instance, channel quality, detected interference, number of available subcarriers, number of user devices 806 operating over wireless network 804, etc. According to this example, it can be determined that a particular sector or sectors in wireless network 804 are experiencing high transmission volume, and the like. AI component 818, in conjunction with processor 816 and/or memory 814, can determine that interference between user devices 806 and/or sectors is high. AI component 818 can infer that a frequency adjustment is appropriate to increase interference diversity and alleviate the interference problem, and can direct frequency hopping component 802 to alter child node value assignments in a channel tree, which will have the result of altering offset assignments to user devices 806 allocated to such altered child nodes. In such a case, AI component 818 can facilitate frequency hopping in the most cost-effective manner possible to mitigate inter-cell interference and improve interference diversity. It will be appreciated that the foregoing examples are illustrative in nature and are not intended to limit the scope of inferences that can be made by AI components 818 and 834 or the manner in which AI components 818 and 834 make such inferences.

While FIG. 8 depicts frequency hopping component 802 as residing in the base station 808, it should be noted that frequency hopping component 802 may be implemented as a combination of functionality in both base station 808, base station controller (not shown), or the like of wireless network 804, and in user device 806 (e.g., frequency hopping component 824). In such aspects, it may be possible to contain separate look-up tables in user device 806 and base station 808 which each correspond to sequences for offset U for the user device, which are known to both devices, e.g. by instructions from base station 808 that corresponds to the user device 806, or some other means.

In the embodiments, where the frequency hopping component 802 resides in the base station 808, the user device 806 may have a look-up table that corresponds to a sequence for varying the offset U based upon instructions, commands, or the like transmitted from the base station 808 and generated by frequency hopping component 802.

FIG. 9 is an illustration of a methodology 900 for generating a signal using an IFDMA protocol, such as can be employed in conjunction with a frequency hopping protocol to improve interference diversity. At 902, a user device can initiate generation of a signal comprising N modulation symbols, for example, [d0 d1 d2 . . . dN-1], by repeating the N symbols to obtain a total of NFFT symbols such that:

[d0 d1 d2 . . . dN-1d0 d1 d2 . . . dN-1 d0 d1 d2 . . . dN-1 . . . d0 d1 d2 . . . dN-1]

At 904, the user device can multiply the kth symbol in the sequence by e−jkΦU, where Φ=2π/NFFT, such that:

[d0 d1e−jΦU d2e−2jΦU . . . dN-1 e−(N-1)jΦU . . . dN-2e−(NFFT−2)jΦU dN-1e−(NFFT−1)jΦU]

At 906, cyclic prefix can optionally be added to the signal by copying the last NCP symbols of the signal generated at 904 to the beginning of the symbol expression, such that:

[ . . . dN-2e−(NFFT−2)jΦU dN-1e−(NFFT−1)jΦU][d0 d1e−jΦU . . . dN-1 e−(N-1)jΦU . . . dN-1e−(NFFT−1)jΦU]

Method 900 can be employed in an IFDMA communication environment in conjunction with frequency hopping techniques set forth herein to mitigate interference between users and/or sectors in a wireless communication environment. It will be appreciated by one skilled in the art that although various methods and/or systems herein are described with regard to an IFDMA system, a suitable FDMA system arrangement having the described features and/or advantages of the IFDMA system can be employed.

FIG. 10 is an illustration of a methodology 1000 for performing frequency hopping in conjunction with an IFDMA modulation protocol in a wireless network communication environment. At 1002, a channel tree can be generated to facilitate frequency hopping of user offsets. The channel tree can have a root node, and each child node of the root node and/or other parent nodes in the tree can be assigned a node value (e.g., non-binary, binary, integer, etc.) In the case of a binary channel tree, described here for purposes of simplicity of illustration, each child node can have a binary value of 0 or 1, such that a parent node has a 0-child and a 1-child. Nodes can be allocated to user devices depending on subcarrier needs of the user devices, such that a user device requiring a relatively large number of subcarriers can be allocated a node closer to the root node than a user device requiring a relatively small number of subcarriers as detailed with regard to FIGS. 1-3. In certain aspects, the channel tree is pre-generated and the nodes, their relationship and values are stored in a memory in the form of a look-up table or the like.

At 1004, node sequences for user devices can be read upward from a user's allocated node to a first child node of the channel tree to determine a value for the user's offset, as detailed with regard to FIGS. 2 and 3. Information related to an offset identified at 1004 can be gleaned from a lookup table to facilitate assigning a specific subcarrier set to the user. For example, a user allocated a node having a value of 1 that depends from parent node with a value of 1, which in turn depends from a root node of the tree, can be assigned offset 3. Additionally, because the user-allocated node is three nodes from the top of the tree (inclusive of the allocated node and the root node, which is not read for purposes of offset U determination, but is counted for subcarrier number determination), it can be assigned a number of offset subcarriers equal to NFFT/4. According to another example illustrating a binary channel tree, a user having an allocated node that is four nodes from the root node (including the root node) and has a lineage of all is (e.g., allocated node=1, parent=1, grandparent=1, root node) can be assigned offset 7 (e.g., binary 111), which can have a number of subcarriers equal to NFFT/8, etc. According to yet another example, if the above lineage were 101 (e.g., allocated node=1, parent=0, grandparent=1, root node), the user can be assigned offset 5 having a number of subcarriers equal to NFFT/8, etc.

At 1006, IFDMA symbols can be generated as detailed with regard to FIG. 9. Such symbols/signals can be converted to an analog signal at 1008 to facilitate transmission thereof. At 1010, node value assignments can be modified to facilitate frequency hopping to mitigate interference. For example, one or more child node value assignments in the channel tree can be altered in order to vary the offset actually associated with the node allocated to a user. For instance, in the above example, the user assigned offset 7 (e.g., 111 binary) comprising NFFT/8 subcarriers can have its parent node pair altered at 1010 so that its node allocation lineage becomes 101 binary, which in turn can result in a reassignment of offset 5 to the user, and so on. According to the example, the user's node allocation can be static during node value assignment variation to ensure that the user retains a number of subcarriers equal to NFFT/8. Additionally, user offset modification can be performed according to a predetermined schedule and/or according to a trigger event, such as upon transmission of every IFDMA symbol (symbol rate hopping), every few symbols (block hopping), etc.

It will be appreciated that although the foregoing examples describe a channel tree that utilizes binary node value assignments, non-binary values can be assigned to such nodes. Moreover, parent nodes can have any suitable number of child nodes associated therewith to facilitate allocating offsets to user devices and performing frequency hopping to mitigate interference.

FIG. 11 illustrates a methodology 1100 for generating a signal using an LFDMA protocol, such as can be employed in conjunction with a frequency hopping protocol to improve interference diversity. At 1102, a user device can initiate generation of a signal comprising N modulation symbols, for example, [d0 d1 d2 . . . dN-1], by taking an N-point fast Fourier transform (FFT) of the N modulation symbols to obtain [D0 D1 D2 . . . DN-1]. The transformed symbols can then be placed in allocated subcarriers [U, U+1, . . . U+N−1] at 1104. At 1106, an NFFT-point inverse fast Fourier transform can be performed to obtain NFFT time domain samples. If desired, cyclic prefix can optionally be added to the symbol at 1108 by copying the last NCP time domain samples to the beginning of the symbol to obtain the LFDMA time domain symbol.

Method 1100 can be employed to generate an LFDMA communication signal in conjunction with a frequency hopping technique to mitigate inter-device and/or inter-sector interference. For example, frequency hopping can be performed upon each LFDMA symbol (e.g., utilizing a symbol rate hopping technique), upon every few LFDMA symbols (e.g., utilizing a block hopping technique, etc.

FIG. 12 illustrates a methodology 1200 for altering offset assignments for users in an LFDMA wireless communication environment. At 1202, channel tree can be generated to map user offset assignments, and nodes in the tree can be allocated to individual users in a wireless network. Node allocation can be performed in a manner similar to that described with regard to FIGS. 1, 2, and 3. In certain aspects, the channel tree is pre-generated and the nodes, their relationship and values are stored in a memory in the form of a look-up table or the like.

At 1204, the channel tree can be read from top to bottom to evaluate user offset assignments. Although the following example describes binary node value assignments for purposes of simplicity, it will be appreciated that non-binary values, and/or any other suitable values, can be assigned to nodes in the channel tree. For instance, a user allocated a node having a value of 1 that depends from parent node with a value of 0, which in turn depends from a root node of the tree, can be assigned offset 1. Additionally, because the user-allocated node is three nodes from the top of the tree (inclusive of the root node, which is not read for purposes of offset U determination, but is counted for subcarrier number determination), it can be assigned a number of offset subcarriers equal to NFFT/4. According to another example, a user having an allocated node that is four nodes from the root node (including the root node) and has a lineage of 110 binary (e.g., allocated node=1, parent=1, grandparent=0, root node) can be assigned offset 6 (e.g., binary 110), which can have a number of subcarriers equal to NFFT/8, etc. According to yet another example, if the above lineage were 101 (e.g., allocated node=1, parent=0, grandparent=1, root node), the user can be assigned offset 5 having a number of subcarriers equal to NFFT/8, etc.

At 1206, an LFDMA signal can be generated as described with regard to FIG. 10 and converted to an analog signal for transmission. At 1208, node value assignments in the channel tree can be varied to facilitate frequency hopping, such as is described with regard to FIG. 11. If desired, user node allocation can be maintained (e.g., static) during node value assignment variation to maintain a constant distance from the root node of the offset tree, which in turn can facilitate ensuring that a precise number of subcarriers are assigned to a given user despite frequency hopping. According to a related aspect, a user whose frequency and/or subcarrier requirements have changed since a previous node allocation iteration can be dynamically reallocated to a node higher or lower on the channel tree based at least in part on information related to the user's resource requirements. In this manner, frequency hopping can be employed in a single carrier FDMA system, such as an LFDMA system to improve interference diversity and provide a more robust communication experience to users of the wireless network employing method 1200.

FIG. 13 shows an exemplary wireless communication system 1300. The wireless communication system 1300 depicts one base station and one terminal for sake of brevity. However, it is to be appreciated that the system can include more than one base station and/or more than one terminal, wherein additional base stations and/or terminals can be substantially similar or different for the exemplary base station and terminal described below. In addition, it is to be appreciated that the base station and/or the terminal can employ the systems (FIGS. 1-8) and/or methods (FIGS. 9-12) described herein to facilitate wireless communication there between.

Referring now to FIG. 13, on a downlink, at access point 1305, a transmit (TX) data processor 1310 receives, formats, codes, interleaves, and modulates (or symbol maps) traffic data and provides modulation symbols (“data symbols”). A symbol modulator 1315 receives and processes the data symbols and pilot symbols and provides a stream of symbols. Symbol modulator 1315 multiplexes data and pilot symbols on the proper subbands, provides a signal value of zero for each unused subband, and obtains a set of N transmit symbols for the N subbands for each symbol period. Each transmit symbol may be a data symbol, a pilot symbol, or a signal value of zero. The pilot symbols may be sent continuously in each symbol period. It will be appreciated that the pilot symbols may be time division multiplexed (TDM), frequency division multiplexed (FDM), or code division multiplexed (CDM). Symbol modulator 1315 can transform each set of N transmit symbols to the time domain using an N-point IFFT to obtain a “transformed” symbol that contains N time-domain chips. Symbol modulator 1315 typically repeats a portion of each transformed symbol to obtain a corresponding symbol. The repeated portion is known as a cyclic prefix and is used to combat delay spread in the wireless channel.

A transmitter unit (TMTR) 1320 receives and converts the stream of symbols into one or more analog signals and further conditions (e.g., amplifies, filters, and frequency upconverts) the analog signals to generate a downlink signal suitable for transmission over the wireless channel. The downlink signal is then transmitted through an antenna 1325 to the terminals. At terminal 1330, an antenna 1335 receives the downlink signal and provides a received signal to a receiver unit (RCVR) 1340. Receiver unit 1340 conditions (e.g., filters, amplifies, and frequency downconverts) the received signal and digitizes the conditioned signal to obtain samples. A symbol demodulator 1345 removes the cyclic prefix appended to each symbol, transforms each received transformed symbol to the frequency domain using an N-point FFT, obtains N received symbols for the N subbands for each symbol period, and provides received pilot symbols to a processor 1350 for channel estimation. Symbol demodulator 1345 further receives a frequency response estimate for the downlink from processor 1350, performs data demodulation on the received data symbols to obtain data symbol estimates (which are estimates of the transmitted data symbols), and provides the data symbol estimates to an RX data processor 1355, which demodulates (i.e., symbol demaps), deinterleaves, and decodes the data symbol estimates to recover the transmitted traffic data. The processing by symbol demodulator 1345 and RX data processor 1355 is complementary to the processing by symbol modulator 1315 and TX data processor 1310, respectively, at access point 1305.

On the uplink, a TX data processor 1360 processes traffic data and provides data symbols. A symbol modulator 1365 receives and multiplexes the data symbols with pilot symbols, performs symbol modulation, and provides a stream of symbols. The pilot symbols may be transmitted on subbands that have been assigned to terminal 1330 for pilot transmission, where the number of pilot subbands for the uplink may be the same or different from the number of pilot subbands for the downlink. A transmitter unit 1370 then receives and processes the stream of symbols to generate an uplink signal, which is transmitted by the antenna 1335 to the access point 1305.

At access point 1305, the uplink signal from terminal 1330 is received by the antenna 1325 and processed by a receiver unit 1375 to obtain samples. A symbol demodulator 1380 then processes the samples and provides received pilot symbols and data symbol estimates for the uplink. An RX data processor 1385 processes the data symbol estimates to recover the traffic data transmitted by terminal 1330. A processor 1390 performs channel estimation for each active terminal transmitting on the uplink. Multiple terminals may transmit pilot concurrently on the uplink on their respective assigned sets of pilot subbands, where the pilot subband sets may be interlaced.

Processors 1390 and 1350 direct (e.g., control, coordinate, manage, etc.) operation at access point 1305 and terminal 1330, respectively. Respective processors 1390 and 1350 can be associated with memory units (not shown) that store program codes and data. Processors 1390 and 1350 can also perform computations to derive frequency and impulse response estimates for the uplink and downlink, respectively.

In further aspects, it is possible to provide a multi-antenna transmitter. In such aspects, a demultiplexer may be provided at the input of TX data processor 1310, which generates multiple streams of data that are separately processed coded and modulated according to different subbands. Additionally, MIMO processing may be provided at the output of the TX data processor 1310 or symbol modulator 1315 so that multiple transmit streams are created prior to transmission but after data processing. At the receiver 1330 various techniques may be utilized to decode the signals from the multiple antennas.

For a multiple-access system (e.g., a frequency division multiple-access (FDMA) system, etc.), multiple terminals may transmit concurrently on the uplink. For such a system, the pilot subbands may be shared among different terminals. The channel estimation techniques may be used in cases where the pilot subbands for each terminal span the entire operating band (possibly except for the band edges). Such a pilot subband structure would be desirable to obtain frequency diversity for each terminal. The techniques described herein may be implemented by various means. For example, these techniques may be implemented in hardware, software, or a combination thereof. For a hardware implementation, the processing units used for channel estimation may be implemented within one or more application specific integrated circuits (ASICs), digital signal processors (DSPs), digital signal processing devices (DSPDs), programmable logic devices (PLDs), field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), processors, controllers, micro-controllers, microprocessors, other electronic units designed to perform the functions described herein, or a combination thereof. With software, implementation can be through modules (e.g., procedures, functions, and so on) that perform the functions described herein. The software codes may be stored in memory unit and executed by the processors 1390 and 1350.

What has been described above includes examples of one or more embodiments. It is, of course, not possible to describe every conceivable combination of components or methodologies for purposes of describing the aforementioned embodiments, but one of ordinary skill in the art may recognize that many further combinations and permutations of various embodiments are possible. Accordingly, the described embodiments are intended to embrace all such alterations, modifications and variations that fall within the spirit and scope of the appended claims. Furthermore, to the extent that the term “includes” is used in either the detailed description or the claims, such term is intended to be inclusive in a manner similar to the term “comprising” as “comprising” is interpreted when employed as a transitional word in a claim.

Palanki, Ravi

Patent Priority Assignee Title
10194463, Jul 21 2004 Qualcomm Incorporated Efficient signaling over access channel
10237892, Jul 21 2004 Qualcomm Incorporated Efficient signaling over access channel
10270625, Dec 19 2016 Futurewei Technologies, Inc. Hardware virtualization for mean and variance estimations of QAM symbols
10313069, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
10327259, Jul 21 2004 Qualcomm Incorporated Efficient signaling over access channel
10517114, Jul 21 2004 Qualcomm Incorporated Efficient signaling over access channel
10849156, Jul 21 2004 Qualcomm Incorporated Efficient signaling over access channel
11032035, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
11039468, Jul 21 2004 Qualcomm Incorporated Efficient signaling over access channel
9520972, Mar 17 2005 Qualcomm, INC Pilot signal transmission for an orthogonal frequency division wireless communication system
Patent Priority Assignee Title
4393276, Mar 19 1981 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Fourier masking analog signal secure communication system
4554668, May 27 1982 Thomson-CSF Frequency-hopping radio communications system
4747137, Jul 16 1985 Kokusai Denshin Denwa Kabushiki Kaisha Speech scrambler
4783779, Oct 10 1986 Kokusai Denshin Denwa Co., Ltd. Frequency assignment system in FDMA communication system
4783780, Jul 09 1985 U S PHILIPS CORPORATION, 100 EAST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK, NY, 10017, A CORP OF DE Method and apparatus for selecting a free channel in a mobile radio system
4975952, Sep 04 1985 U. S. Philips Corporation Method of data communication
5008900, Aug 14 1989 InterDigital Technology Corporation Subscriber unit for wireless digital subscriber communication system
5115248, Sep 26 1989 Agence Spatiale Europeenne Multibeam antenna feed device
5268694, Jul 06 1992 CDC PROPRIETE INTELLECTUELLE Communication system employing spectrum reuse on a spherical surface
5282222, Mar 31 1992 QUARTERHILL INC ; WI-LAN INC Method and apparatus for multiple access between transceivers in wireless communications using OFDM spread spectrum
5363408, Mar 24 1992 Vizio, Inc Mode selective quadrature amplitude modulation communication system
5371761, Jul 16 1992 U S PHILIPS CORPORATION Transmission system and receiver for this system
5384410, Mar 24 1993 Bristol-Myers Squibb Pharma Company Removal of boronic acid protecting groups by transesterification
5384810, Feb 05 1992 CONEXANT, INC Modulo decoder
5406551, Jan 31 1992 Nippon Hoso Kyokai Method and apparatus for digital signal transmission using orthogonal frequency division multiplexing
5410538, Nov 09 1993 AT&T IPM Corp Method and apparatus for transmitting signals in a multi-tone code division multiple access communication system
5455839, Dec 27 1991 CIF LICENSING, LLC Device and method for precoding
5465253, Jan 04 1994 Motorola Mobility LLC Method and apparatus for demand-assigned reduced-rate out-of-band signaling channel
5491727, Jul 08 1991 Hal Communications Corp. Apparatus useful in radio communication of digital data using minimal bandwidth
5513379, May 04 1994 American Telephone and Telegraph Corporation Apparatus and method for dynamic resource allocation in wireless communication networks utilizing ordered borrowing
5539748, Nov 01 1993 Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson Enhanced sleep mode in radiocommunication systems
5548582, Dec 22 1993 KONINKLIJKE PHILIPS N V Multicarrier frequency hopping communications system
5553069, Jul 30 1993 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Radiocommunication system
5583869, Sep 30 1994 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method for dynamically allocating wireless communication resources
5594738, Oct 18 1993 Motorola Mobility LLC Time slot allocation method
5604744, Nov 01 1993 Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson Digital control channels having logical channels for multiple access radiocommunication
5612978, May 30 1995 GENERAL DYNAMICS C4 SYSTEMS, INC Method and apparatus for real-time adaptive interference cancellation in dynamic environments
5625876, Oct 28 1993 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for performing handoff between sectors of a common base station
5684491, Jan 27 1995 ANTENNA PRODUCTS, INC High gain antenna systems for cellular use
5726978, Jun 22 1995 TELEFONAKTIEBOLAGET L M ERICSSON, PUBL Adaptive channel allocation in a frequency division multiplexed system
5732113, Jun 20 1996 Stanford University Timing and frequency synchronization of OFDM signals
5745487, Nov 16 1995 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Communication apparatus for transmitting/receiving different types of data in one TDM slot
5768276, Oct 05 1992 Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericson Digital control channels having logical channels supporting broadcast SMS
5790537, May 15 1996 McGill University Interference suppression in DS-CDMA systems
5812938, Jul 11 1994 Qualcomm Incorporated Reverse link, closed loop power control in a code division multiple access system
5815488, Sep 28 1995 TC TECHNOLOGY LLC Multiple user access method using OFDM
5822368, Apr 04 1996 Infineon Technologies AG Developing a channel impulse response by using distortion
5828650, Jul 03 1995 Nokia Technologies Oy Combined modulation--and multiple access method for radio signals
5838268, Mar 14 1997 STMICROELECTRONICS N V Apparatus and methods for modulation and demodulation of data
5867478, Jun 20 1997 Google Technology Holdings LLC Synchronous coherent orthogonal frequency division multiplexing system, method, software and device
5870393, Jan 20 1995 FIPA Frohwitter Intellectual Property AG Spread spectrum communication system and transmission power control method therefor
5887023, Nov 29 1995 NEC Corporation Method and apparatus for a frequency hopping-spread spectrum communication system
5907585, Nov 16 1995 NTT Mobile Communications Network Inc. Digital signal detecting method and detector
5920571, Feb 07 1997 Alcatel-Lucent USA Inc Frequency channel and time slot assignments in broadband access networks
5926470, May 22 1996 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for providing diversity in hard handoff for a CDMA system
5933421, Feb 06 1997 AT&T MOBILITY II LLC Method for frequency division duplex communications
5949814, Jan 15 1997 Qualcomm Incorporated High-data-rate supplemental channel for CDMA telecommunications system
5953325, Jan 02 1997 TELEFONAKTIEBOLAGET LM ERICSSON PUBL Forward link transmission mode for CDMA cellular communications system using steerable and distributed antennas
5955992, Feb 12 1998 DEPARTMENT 13, INC Frequency-shifted feedback cavity used as a phased array antenna controller and carrier interference multiple access spread-spectrum transmitter
5956642, Nov 25 1996 Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson Adaptive channel allocation method and apparatus for multi-slot, multi-carrier communication system
5995992, Nov 17 1997 Bull HN Information Systems Inc. Conditional truncation indicator control for a decimal numeric processor employing result truncation
5999826, May 17 1996 Google Technology Holdings LLC Devices for transmitter path weights and methods therefor
6002942, Jun 28 1996 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO , LTD , A CORP OF KOREA Method for controlling transmitting power of a mobile station
6016123, Feb 16 1994 Microsoft Technology Licensing, LLC Base station antenna arrangement
6038150, Jul 23 1997 SYNC POWER CORPORATION Transistorized rectifier for a multiple output converter
6038263, Jul 31 1997 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for transmitting signals in a communication system
6038450, Sep 12 1997 WSOU Investments, LLC Soft handover system for a multiple sub-carrier communication system and method thereof
6052364, Jun 13 1997 Comsat Corporation CDMA system architecture for satcom terminals
6061337, Dec 02 1996 THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, AS COLLATERAL AGENT System and method for CDMA handoff using telemetry to determine the need for handoff and to select the destination cell site
6067315, Dec 04 1997 Unwired Planet, LLC Method and apparatus for coherently-averaged power estimation
6075350, Apr 24 1998 Lockheed Martin Energy Research Corporation Power line conditioner using cascade multilevel inverters for voltage regulation, reactive power correction, and harmonic filtering
6075797, Oct 17 1997 Hewlett Packard Enterprise Development LP Method and system for detecting mobility of a wireless-capable modem to minimize data transfer rate renegotiations
6076114, Apr 18 1997 International Business Machines Corporation Methods, systems and computer program products for reliable data transmission over communications networks
6088345, Nov 22 1996 Sony Corporation Communication method, base station and terminal apparatus
6088592, Mar 25 1996 Treble Investments Limited Liability Company Wireless system plan using in band-translators with diversity backhaul to enable efficient depolyment of high capacity base transceiver systems
6108323, Nov 26 1997 Nokia Technologies Oy Method and system for operating a CDMA cellular system having beamforming antennas
6108550, Jun 13 1997 Telefonaktienbolaget LM Ericsson Reuse of a physical control channel in a distributed cellular radio communication system
6112094, Apr 06 1998 Unwired Planet, LLC Orthogonal frequency hopping pattern re-use scheme
6128776, May 07 1997 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method for managing software in code division multiple access (CDMA) base station system of personal communication system
6138037, Apr 23 1997 Nokia Siemens Networks Oy Implementation of signalling in a telecommunications network
6141317, Aug 22 1996 TELECOM HOLDING PARENT LLC Apparatus and method for bandwidth management in a multi-point OFDM/DMT digital communications system
6154484, Sep 06 1995 Verance Corporation Method and apparatus for embedding auxiliary data in a primary data signal using frequency and time domain processing
6169910, Dec 30 1994 AXXCELERA BROADBAND WIRELESS, INC Focused narrow beam communication system
6172993, Dec 28 1996 QUARTERHILL INC ; WI-LAN INC Frame synchronization method and apparatus for use in digital communication system utilizing OFDM method
6175550, Apr 01 1997 CONVERSANT INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT INC Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing system with dynamically scalable operating parameters and method thereof
6175650, Jan 26 1998 Xerox Corporation Adaptive quantization compatible with the JPEG baseline sequential mode
6176550, Jul 16 1999 Steelcase Development Inc. Adjustable armrest for chairs
6198775, Apr 28 1998 Ericsson Inc. Transmit diversity method, systems, and terminals using scramble coding
6215983, Jun 02 1995 Northrop Grumman Systems Corporation Method and apparatus for complex phase equalization for use in a communication system
6226280, Dec 11 1996 Texas Instruments Incorporated Allocating and de-allocating transmission resources in a local multipoint distribution services system
6232918, Jan 07 1997 Motorola, Inc; TRAFFICMASTER USA, INC Antenna array calibration in wireless communication systems
6240129, Jul 10 1997 RPX Corporation Method and windowing unit to reduce leakage, fourier transformer and DMT modem wherein the unit is used
6249683, Apr 08 1999 Qualcomm Incorporated Forward link power control of multiple data streams transmitted to a mobile station using a common power control channel
6256478, Feb 18 1999 Aster Wireless Dynamic packet sizing in an RF communications system
6271946, Jan 25 1999 Regents of the University of California, The Optical layer survivability and security system using optical label switching and high-speed optical header generation and detection
6272122, Apr 14 1997 Samsung Electronics, Co., Ltd. Pilot PN offset assigning method for digital mobile telecommunications system
6310704, Jun 02 1995 Northrop Grumman Systems Corporation Communication apparatus for transmitting and receiving signals over a fiber-optic waveguide using different frequency bands of light
6317435, Mar 08 1999 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for maximizing the use of available capacity in a communication system
6335922, Feb 11 1997 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for forward link rate scheduling
6337659, Oct 25 1999 GAMMA NU, INC. Phased array base station antenna system having distributed low power amplifiers
6337983, Jun 21 2000 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method for autonomous handoff in a wireless communication system
6353637, Mar 29 1999 RPX Corporation Multistream in-band on-channel systems
6363060, Jun 30 1999 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A DELAWARE CORPORATION Method and apparatus for fast WCDMA acquisition
6374115, May 28 1997 TRANSCRYPT INTERNATIONAL E F JOHNSON COMPANY Method and apparatus for trunked radio repeater communications with backwards compatibility
6377539, Sep 09 1997 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO , LTD Method for generating quasi-orthogonal code and spreader using the same in mobile communication system
6377809, Sep 16 1997 Qualcomm Incorporated Channel structure for communication systems
6388998, Feb 04 1999 RPX Corporation Reuse of codes and spectrum in a CDMA system with multiple-sector cells
6393008, Dec 23 1997 Nokia Corporation Control structures for contention-based packet data services in wideband CDMA
6393012, Jan 13 1999 Qualcomm Incorporated System for allocating resources in a communication system
6401062, Feb 27 1998 NEC Corporation Apparatus for encoding and apparatus for decoding speech and musical signals
6438369, Aug 09 1996 Microsoft Technology Licensing, LLC Network directed system selection for cellular and PCS enhanced roaming
6449246, Sep 15 1999 Cisco Technology, Inc Multicarrier personal access communication system
6466800, Nov 19 1999 UNIFY, INC Method and system for a wireless communication system incorporating channel selection algorithm for 2.4 GHz direct sequence spread spectrum cordless telephone system
6473467, Mar 22 2000 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A CORP OF DELAWARE Method and apparatus for measuring reporting channel state information in a high efficiency, high performance communications system
6477317, Nov 14 1994 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Video reproducing apparatus which demultiplexes a plurality of video programs and outputs a plurality of program numbers (attribute data) in parallel
6478422, Mar 19 2001 Richard A., Hansen Single bifocal custom shooters glasses
6483820, Mar 22 1999 Ericsson Inc System and method for dynamic radio resource allocation for non-transparent high-speed circuit-switched data services
6487243, Mar 08 1999 IBM Corporation Modems, methods, and computer program products for recovering from errors in a tone reversal sequence between two modems
6496790, Sep 29 2000 Intel Corporation Management of sensors in computer systems
6501810, Oct 13 1998 AVAGO TECHNOLOGIES INTERNATIONAL SALES PTE LIMITED Fast frame synchronization
6507601, Feb 09 2000 GOOGLE LLC Collision avoidance
6519462, May 11 2000 WSOU Investments, LLC Method and apparatus for multi-user resource management in wireless communication systems
6529525, May 19 2000 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method for supporting acknowledged transport layer protocols in GPRS/edge host application
6535666, Jun 02 1995 Northrop Grumman Systems Corporation Method and apparatus for separating signals transmitted over a waveguide
6539008, Nov 03 1997 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO , LTD Method for inserting power control bits in the CDMA mobile system
6539213, Jun 14 1999 ALEREON INC System and method for impulse radio power control
6542485, Nov 25 1998 RPX Corporation Methods and apparatus for wireless communication using time division duplex time-slotted CDMA
6542743, Aug 31 1999 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for reducing pilot search times utilizing mobile station location information
6563806, Dec 12 1997 Hitachi, Ltd. Base station for multi-carrier TDMA mobile communication system and method for assigning communication channels
6563881, Jul 13 1998 Sony Corporation Communication method and transmitter with transmission symbols arranged at intervals on a frequency axis
6577739, Sep 19 1997 University of Iowa Research Foundation Apparatus and methods for proportional audio compression and frequency shifting
6584140, Jan 22 1999 Bae Systems Information and Electronic Systems Integration INC Spectrum efficient fast frequency-hopped modem with coherent demodulation
6590881, Dec 04 1998 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A CORP OF DELAWARE Method and apparatus for providing wireless communication system synchronization
6597746, Feb 18 1999 CONEXANT, INC System and method for peak to average power ratio reduction
6601206, Dec 04 1998 AVAGO TECHNOLOGIES GENERAL IP SINGAPORE PTE LTD Error concealment or correction of speech, image and video signals
6614857, Apr 23 1999 WSOU Investments, LLC Iterative channel estimation and compensation based thereon
6625172, Apr 26 2001 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A CORP OF DELAWARE Rescheduling scheduled transmissions
6636568, Mar 01 2002 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A DELAWARE CORPORATION Data transmission with non-uniform distribution of data rates for a multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) system
6654339, Jan 08 1999 Wi-Fi One, LLC Synchronization symbol structure using OFDM based transmission method
6654431, Sep 15 1999 Cisco Technology, Inc Multicarrier personal access communication system
6657949, Jul 06 1999 Cisco Technology, Inc Efficient request access for OFDM systems
6658258, Sep 29 2000 Alcatel-Lucent USA Inc Method and apparatus for estimating the location of a mobile terminal
6674787, May 19 1999 InterDigital Technology Corporation Raising random access channel packet payload
6674810, May 27 1999 Hewlett Packard Enterprise Development LP Method and apparatus for reducing peak-to-average power ratio in a discrete multi-tone signal
6675012, Mar 08 2001 Nokia Technologies Oy Apparatus, and associated method, for reporting a measurement summary in a radio communication system
6678318, Jan 11 2000 AVAGO TECHNOLOGIES INTERNATIONAL SALES PTE LIMITED Method and apparatus for time-domain equalization in discrete multitone transceivers
6690951, Dec 20 1999 Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson (publ) Dynamic size allocation system and method
6693952, Mar 16 1999 Lucent Technologies Inc Dynamic code allocation for downlink shared channels
6701165, Jun 21 2000 CONVERSANT INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT INC Method and apparatus for reducing interference in non-stationary subscriber radio units using flexible beam selection
6704571, Oct 17 2000 Cisco Technology, Inc. Reducing data loss during cell handoffs
6711400, Apr 16 1997 NOKIA SOLUTIONS AND NETWORKS OY Authentication method
6717908, Jun 19 1997 Qualcomm, Incorporated Bit interleaving for orthogonal frequency division multiplexing in the transmission of digital signals
6721568, Nov 10 1999 Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson Admission control in a mobile radio communications system
6724719, Feb 11 2000 Ericsson AB Determining transmit signal powers of channels in a CDMA communications system
6731602, Feb 20 1998 Hitachi, Ltd. Packet communication system and packet communication apparatus
6735244, Aug 30 1999 Fujitsu Limited Data transmission system and receiver unit thereof
6744743, Mar 30 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for controlling transmissions of a communications system
6748220, May 05 2000 Microsoft Technology Licensing, LLC Resource allocation in wireless networks
6751444, Jul 02 2001 J & K SERVICES, L L C ; KAON SYSTEMS, INC ; SDR HOLDINGS L L C Method and apparatus for adaptive carrier allocation and power control in multi-carrier communication systems
6751456, Mar 20 1997 Intel Corporation Communication control for a user of a central communication center
6754511, Feb 04 2000 Harris Corporation Linear signal separation using polarization diversity
6763009, Dec 03 1999 RPX Corporation Down-link transmission scheduling in CDMA data networks
6765969, Sep 01 1999 MOTOROLA SOLUTIONS, INC Method and device for multi-user channel estimation
6776165, Sep 12 2002 Regents of the University of California, The Magnetic navigation system for diagnosis, biopsy and drug delivery vehicles
6776765, Aug 21 2001 HERAEUS MATERIALS S A Steerable stylet
6778513, Sep 29 2000 Intel Corporation Method and apparatus for separting multiple users in a shared-channel communication system
6785341, May 11 2001 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for processing data in a multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communication system utilizing channel state information
6798736, Sep 22 1998 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A CORP OF DELAWARE Method and apparatus for transmitting and receiving variable rate data
6799043, Dec 04 2001 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for a reverse link supplemental channel scheduling
6802035, Sep 19 2000 Apple Inc System and method of dynamically optimizing a transmission mode of wirelessly transmitted information
6804307, Jan 27 2000 TELEFONAKTIEBOLAGET LM ERICSSON PUBL Method and apparatus for efficient transmit diversity using complex space-time block codes
6813284, Jan 17 2001 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for allocating data streams given transmission time interval (TTI) constraints
6821535, Feb 03 2000 Xyrofin Oy Process for hard panning of chewable cores and cores produced by the process
6828293, Jul 28 1999 Ciba Specialty Chemicals Corporation Water-soluble granules of salen-type manganese complexes
6829293, Jan 16 2001 Macom Technology Solutions Holdings, Inc Method and apparatus for line probe signal processing
6831943, Aug 13 1999 Apple Inc Code division multiple access wireless system with closed loop mode using ninety degree phase rotation and beamformer verification
6842487, Sep 22 2000 CLUSTER LLC; TELEFONAKTIEBOLAGET LM ERICSSON PUBL Cyclic delay diversity for mitigating intersymbol interference in OFDM systems
6850481, Sep 01 2000 Apple Inc Channels estimation for multiple input—multiple output, orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) system
6850509, Feb 01 2000 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS, CO , LTD Scheduling apparatus and method for packet data service in a wireless communication system
6862271, Feb 26 2002 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A DELAWARE CORPORATION Multiple-input, multiple-output (MIMO) systems with multiple transmission modes
6870808, Oct 18 2000 J & K SERVICES, L L C ; KAON SYSTEMS, INC ; SDR HOLDINGS L L C Channel allocation in broadband orthogonal frequency-division multiple-access/space-division multiple-access networks
6870826, May 17 1999 GLOBAL D, LLC Multicarrier transfer system and multicarrier modulation method
6904097, Jun 01 2001 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for adaptive signaling in a QAM communication system
6904283, Dec 15 2000 J & K SERVICES, L L C ; KAON SYSTEMS, INC ; SDR HOLDINGS L L C Multi-carrier communications with group-based subcarrier allocation
6904550, Dec 30 2002 Google Technology Holdings LLC Velocity enhancement for OFDM systems
6907020, Jan 20 2000 Apple Inc Frame structures supporting voice or streaming communications with high speed data communications in wireless access networks
6907269, Oct 02 2000 NTT DOCOMO, INC. Mobile communication base station equipment
6909707, Nov 06 2001 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for pseudo-random noise offset reuse in a multi-sector CDMA system
6909797, Jul 10 1996 Mevis Medical Solutions AG Density nodule detection in 3-D digital images
6917602, May 29 2002 Nokia Corporation System and method for random access channel capture with automatic retransmission request
6917821, Sep 23 2003 Qualcomm, Incorporated; Qualcomm Incorporated Successive interference cancellation receiver processing with selection diversity
6927728, Mar 13 2003 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for multi-antenna transmission
6928047, Sep 11 1999 University of Delaware Precoded OFDM systems robust to spectral null channels and vector OFDM systems with reduced cyclic prefix length
6934266, Nov 07 2000 Apple Inc System and method for data transmission from multiple wireless base transceiver stations to a subscriber unit
6934275, Apr 17 2000 Google Technology Holdings LLC Apparatus and method for providing separate forward dedicated and shared control channels in a communications system
6934340, Mar 19 2001 Cisco Technology, Inc. Adaptive control system for interference rejections in a wireless communications system
6940827, Mar 09 2001 J & K SERVICES, L L C ; KAON SYSTEMS, INC ; SDR HOLDINGS L L C Communication system using OFDM for one direction and DSSS for another direction
6940842, Jun 01 1998 Intel Corporation System and method for maintaining wireless channels over a reverse link of a CDMA wireless communication system
6940845, Mar 23 2000 AT&T Corp Asymmetric measurement-based dynamic packet assignment system and method for wireless data services
6954448, Feb 01 2001 Apple Inc Alternate channel for carrying selected message types
6954481, Apr 18 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Pilot use in orthogonal frequency division multiplexing based spread spectrum multiple access systems
6954622, Jan 29 2002 L-3 Communications Corporation Cooperative transmission power control method and system for CDMA communication systems
6961364, Apr 18 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Base station identification in orthogonal frequency division multiplexing based spread spectrum multiple access systems
6963543, Jun 29 2001 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and system for group call service
6970682, Apr 27 2001 XR Communications, LLC Wireless packet switched communication systems and networks using adaptively steered antenna arrays
6975868, Feb 21 2001 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A DELAWARE CORPORATION Method and apparatus for IS-95B reverse link supplemental code channel frame validation and fundamental code channel rate decision improvement
6980540, Aug 16 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Apparatus and method for acquiring an uplink traffic channel, in wireless communications systems
6985434, Sep 01 2000 Apple Inc Adaptive time diversity and spatial diversity for OFDM
6985453, Feb 15 2001 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for link quality feedback in a wireless communication system
6985466, Nov 09 1999 Intel Corporation Downlink signal processing in CDMA systems utilizing arrays of antennae
6985498, Aug 26 2002 Qualcomm Incorporated Beacon signaling in a wireless system
6987746, Mar 15 1999 LG Electronics Inc Pilot signals for synchronization and/or channel estimation
6993342, May 07 2003 Google Technology Holdings LLC Buffer occupancy used in uplink scheduling for a communication device
7002900, Oct 25 2002 Qualcomm Incorporated Transmit diversity processing for a multi-antenna communication system
7006529, May 12 2000 Nokia Siemens Networks Oy Method for arranging communication between terminals and an access point in a communication system
7006557, Jan 31 2002 Qualcomm Incorporated Time tracking loop for diversity pilots
7006848, Mar 23 2001 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A DELAWARE CORPORATION Method and apparatus for utilizing channel state information in a wireless communication system
7009500, Feb 13 2002 Ford Global Technologies, LLC Method for operating a pre-crash sensing system in a vehicle having a countermeasure system using stereo cameras
7010048, Feb 12 1998 DEPARTMENT 13, INC Multiple access method and system
7013143, Apr 30 2003 Google Technology Holdings LLC HARQ ACK/NAK coding for a communication device during soft handoff
7016318, Jan 13 1999 Qualcomm, Incorporated System for allocating resources in a communication system
7016319, Mar 24 2003 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for reducing co-channel interference in a communication system
7016425, Jan 15 1999 SONY INTERNATIONAL EUROPE GMBH Quasi-differential modulation/demodulation method for multi-amplitude digital modulated signals and OFDM system
7020110, Jan 08 2002 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A DELAWARE CORPORATION Resource allocation for MIMO-OFDM communication systems
7023880, Oct 28 2002 Qualcomm Incorporated Re-formatting variable-rate vocoder frames for inter-system transmissions
7039356, Mar 12 2002 V-SILICON SEMICONDUCTOR HANGZHOU CO LTD Selecting a set of antennas for use in a wireless communication system
7039370, Oct 16 2003 Qualcomm Incorporated Methods and apparatus of providing transmit and/or receive diversity with multiple antennas in wireless communication systems
7042856, May 03 2001 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for controlling uplink transmissions of a wireless communication system
7042857, Oct 29 2002 QUALCOM, Incorporated Uplink pilot and signaling transmission in wireless communication systems
7047006, Apr 28 2004 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for transmission and reception of narrowband signals within a wideband communication system
7050402, Jun 09 2000 Texas Instruments Incorporated Wireless communications with frequency band selection
7050405, Aug 23 2002 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A DELAWARE CORPORATION Method and system for a data transmission in a communication system
7050759, Feb 19 2002 Qualcomm Incorporated Channel quality feedback mechanism and method
7054301, Dec 31 2001 Intel Corporation Coordinated hopping in wireless networks using adaptive antenna arrays
7061898, Mar 01 2001 Apple System and method for time slotted code division multiple access communication in a wireless communication environment
7069009, Sep 30 2002 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO , LTD Apparatus and method for allocating resources of a virtual cell in an OFDM mobile communication system
7072315, Oct 10 2000 J & K SERVICES, L L C ; KAON SYSTEMS, INC ; SDR HOLDINGS L L C Medium access control for orthogonal frequency-division multiple-access (OFDMA) cellular networks
7079867, Mar 08 2000 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS, CO , LTD Semi-blind transmit antenna array device using feedback information and method thereof in a mobile communication system
7085574, Apr 15 2003 Qualcomm Incorporated Grant channel assignment
7095708, Jun 23 1999 AT&T MOBILITY II LLC Methods and apparatus for use in communicating voice and high speed data in a wireless communication system
7095709, Jun 24 2002 Qualcomm Incorporated Diversity transmission modes for MIMO OFDM communication systems
7099299, Mar 04 2002 Agency for Science, Technology and Research CDMA system with frequency domain equalization
7099630, Jul 04 2000 NOKIA SOLUTIONS AND NETWORKS GMBH & CO KG Beam forming method
7103384, May 17 2002 Samsung Electronics, Co., Ltd. Apparatus and method for forming a forward link transmission beam of a smart antenna in a mobile communication system
7106319, Sep 14 2001 Seiko Epson Corporation Power supply circuit, voltage conversion circuit, semiconductor device, display device, display panel, and electronic equipment
7113808, Aug 30 2002 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Apparatus and method for transmitting and receiving signals using multi-antennas
7120134, Feb 15 2001 QULCOMM INCORPORATED, A DELAWARE CORPORATION Reverse link channel architecture for a wireless communication system
7120395, Oct 20 2003 Apple MIMO communications
7126928, Aug 05 2003 Qualcomm Incorporated Grant, acknowledgement, and rate control active sets
7131086, Mar 30 2004 Fujitsu Limited Logic verification device, logic verification method and logic verification computer program
7133460, Oct 20 2000 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO , LTD Apparatus and method for determining a data rate of packet data in a mobile communication system
7139328, Nov 04 2004 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for closed loop data transmission
7142864, Apr 23 2003 Qualcomm Incorporated Methods and apparatus of enhancing performance in wireless communication systems
7145940, Dec 05 2003 Qualcomm, INC Pilot transmission schemes for a multi-antenna system
7145959, Apr 25 2001 GOOGLE LLC Smart antenna based spectrum multiplexing using existing pilot signals for orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) modulations
7149199, May 30 2000 Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology; Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute Multi-dimensional orthogonal resource hopping multiplexing communications method and apparatus
7149238, Feb 24 1997 Cingular Wireless II, LLC Highly bandwidth-efficient communications
7151761, Mar 19 1999 Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson Code reservation for interference measurement in a CDMA radiocommunication system
7151936, Jan 25 2001 TELEFONAKTIEBOLAGET LM ERICSSON PUBL Downlink scheduling using parallel code trees
7154936, Dec 03 2001 Qualcomm Incorporated Iterative detection and decoding for a MIMO-OFDM system
7155236, Feb 18 2003 Qualcomm Incorporated Scheduled and autonomous transmission and acknowledgement
7157351, May 20 2004 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Ltd. Ozone vapor clean method
7161971, Apr 29 2002 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A DELAWARE CORPORATION Sending transmission format information on dedicated channels
7164649, Nov 02 2001 Qualcomm Incorporated Adaptive rate control for OFDM communication system
7164696, Jul 26 2000 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Multi-carrier CDMA communication device, multi-carrier CDMA transmitting device, and multi-carrier CDMA receiving device
7167916, Aug 30 2002 Unisys Corporation Computer OS dispatcher operation with virtual switching queue and IP queues
7170937, May 01 2002 Texas Instruments Incorporated Complexity-scalable intra-frame prediction technique
7177297, May 12 2003 Qualcomm Incorporated Fast frequency hopping with a code division multiplexed pilot in an OFDMA system
7177351, Mar 01 2002 Qualcomm, Incorporated Data transmission with non-uniform distribution of data rates for a multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) system
7180627, Aug 16 2002 Avery Dennison Retail Information Services LLC Hand-held portable printer with RFID read/write capability
7181170, Dec 22 2003 Google Technology Holdings LLC Apparatus and method for adaptive broadcast transmission
7184426, Dec 12 2002 Qualcomm, Incorporated Method and apparatus for burst pilot for a time division multiplex system
7184713, Jun 20 2002 Qualcomm Incorporated Rate control for multi-channel communication systems
7188300, May 01 2001 Unwired Planet, LLC Flexible layer one for radio interface to PLMN
7197282, Jul 26 2001 Unwired Planet, LLC Mobile station loop-back signal processing
7200177, Jul 13 2001 Panasonic Corporation Multi-carrier transmission apparatus, multi-carrier reception apparatus, and multi-carrier radio communication method
7209712, Sep 23 2002 Qualcomm, Incorporated; Qualcomm Incorporated Mean square estimation of channel quality measure
7215979, Feb 12 2003 MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO , LTD Transmitter apparatus and radio communication method
7230941, Apr 26 2001 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A DELAWARE CORPORATION Preamble channel decoding
7230942, Oct 03 2003 Qualcomm Incorporated Method of downlink resource allocation in a sectorized environment
7233634, Mar 27 2003 Apple Inc Maximum likelihood decoding
7236747, Jun 18 2003 Veebeam Corporation Increasing OFDM transmit power via reduction in pilot tone
7242722, Oct 17 2003 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for transmission and reception within an OFDM communication system
7243150, Jul 10 2002 RADWIN LTD Reducing the access delay for transmitting processed data over transmission data
7248559, Oct 17 2001 Malikie Innovations Limited Scattered pilot pattern and channel estimation method for MIMO-OFDM systems
7248841, Jun 13 2000 Comcast Cable Communications, LLC Method and apparatus for optimization of wireless multipoint electromagnetic communication networks
7254158, May 12 2003 Qualcomm Incorporated Soft handoff with interference cancellation in a wireless frequency hopping communication system
7257167, Aug 19 2003 HFI INNOVATION INC System and method for multi-access MIMO channels with feedback capacity constraint
7257406, Jul 23 2004 Qualcomm, INC Restrictive reuse set management
7257423, Nov 20 2002 Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation of America Base station apparatus and transmission assignment control method
7260153, Sep 09 2002 FLEET CONNECT SOLUTIONS LLC Multi input multi output wireless communication method and apparatus providing extended range and extended rate across imperfectly estimated channels
7280467, Jan 07 2003 Qualcomm Incorporated Pilot transmission schemes for wireless multi-carrier communication systems
7289570, Apr 10 2000 Texas Instruments Incorporated Wireless communications
7289585, Mar 30 2004 Apple Inc Multicarrier receivers and methods for separating transmitted signals in a multiple antenna system
7290195, Mar 05 2004 Microsoft Technology Licensing, LLC Adaptive acknowledgment delay
7292651, Dec 31 1998 AT&T Corp. Pilot-aided channel estimation for OFDM in wireless systems
7292863, Nov 19 2002 NTT DOCOMO, INC. Admission control method and device in mobile communication system
7295509, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
7313086, Feb 13 2003 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba OFDM receiver, semiconductor integrated circuit and OFDM method for receiving a signal
7313126, Jul 31 2003 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Control system and multiple access method in wireless communication system
7313174, Feb 08 2001 WAVECOM Method for extracting a variable reference pattern
7313407, Sep 05 2002 Cisco Systems, Inc Allocation of radio resources in a CDMA2000 cellular system
7327812, Mar 27 2003 NTT DoCoMo, Inc Apparatus and method for estimating a plurality of channels
7330701, Oct 29 2002 Nokia Corporation Low complexity beamformers for multiple transmit and receive antennas
7336727, Aug 19 2004 SISVEL INTERNATIONAL S A Generalized m-rank beamformers for MIMO systems using successive quantization
7349371, Sep 29 2000 Apple Inc Selecting random access channels
7349667, Oct 19 2001 Texas Instruments Incorporated Simplified noise estimation and/or beamforming for wireless communications
7356000, Nov 21 2003 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for reducing call setup delay
7356005, Jun 05 2003 Nokia Corporation Apparatus and associated method, by which to facilitate scheduling of data communications in a radio communications system
7356073, Sep 10 2003 WSOU Investments, LLC Method and apparatus providing an advanced MIMO receiver that includes a signal-plus-residual-interference (SPRI) detector
7359327, Mar 26 2003 NEC Corporation Radio communication system, base station, method of correcting radio link quality information employed therefor, and its program
7363055, May 09 2002 RCATSONE INCORPORATED Method, apparatus and article to remotely associate wireless communications devices with subscriber identities and/or proxy wireless communications devices
7366223, Jun 06 2002 Intel Corporation Modifying hopping sequences in wireless networks
7366253, May 15 2003 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO , LTD Device and method for transmitting and receiving data by a transmit diversity scheme using multiple antennas in a mobile communication system
7366520, Jul 03 2001 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Adaptive signal processing method in a MIMO-system
7369531, Oct 31 2003 Samsung Eectronics Co., Ltd Apparatus and method for transmitting/receiving a pilot signal for distinguishing a base station in a communication system using an OFDM scheme
7372911, Jun 28 2002 TAHOE RESEARCH, LTD Beam forming and transmit diversity in a multiple array radio communications system
7372912, May 15 2003 LG Electronics Inc Method and apparatus for allocating channelization codes for wireless communications
7379489, Jul 18 2002 Pantech Wireless, LLC Orthogonal variable spreading factor (OVSF) code assignment
7382764, Apr 09 2004 LAPIS SEMICONDUCTOR CO , LTD Method of controlling a receiving operation
7392014, Jun 27 2002 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N V Measurement of channel characteristics in a communication system
7394865, Jun 25 2003 Intellectual Ventures I LLC Signal constellations for multi-carrier systems
7403745, Aug 02 2005 RPX Corporation Channel quality predictor and method of estimating a channel condition in a wireless communications network
7403748, Apr 07 2000 WSOU Investments, LLC Multi-antenna transmission method and system
7406119, May 09 1997 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for reducing signal processing requirements for transmitting packet-based data
7406336, Dec 22 2003 Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson (publ); TELEFONAKTIEBOLAGET LM ERICSSON PUBL Method for determining transmit weights
7411898, May 10 2004 INTEL GERMANY GMBH & CO KG Preamble generator for a multiband OFDM transceiver
7412212, Oct 07 2002 Nokia Technologies Oy Communication system
7418043, Jul 19 2000 DEPARTMENT 13, INC Software adaptable high performance multicarrier transmission protocol
7418246, Feb 26 2003 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Physical layer unit for transmitting or receiving various signals, wireless LAN system including the same, and wireless LAN method using the wireless LAN system
7423991, Dec 23 2003 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd; Seoul National University Industry Foundation Apparatus and method for allocating subchannels adaptively according to frequency reuse rates in an orthogonal frequency division multiple access system
7426426, Jul 05 2005 Vibration Research Corporation System and method for simultaneously controlling spectrum and kurtosis of a random vibration
7428426, Aug 06 2004 Qualcomm, INC Method and apparatus for controlling transmit power in a wireless communications device
7433661, Jun 25 2003 Alcatel-Lucent USA Inc Method for improved performance and reduced bandwidth channel state information feedback in communication systems
7437164, Jun 08 2004 Qualcomm, INC Soft handoff for reverse link in a wireless communication system with frequency reuse
7443835, Dec 03 2001 Nokia Technologies Oy Policy based mechanisms for selecting access routers and mobile context
7447270, Nov 17 2000 Nokia Technologies Oy Method for controlling the data signal weighting in multi-element transceivers and corresponding devices and telecommunications network
7450532, Dec 05 2003 Qualcomm Incorporated Apparatus and method for transmitting data by selected eigenvector in closed loop MIMO mobile communication system
7450548, Nov 17 2002 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft MIMO signal processing method involving a rank-adaptive matching of the transmission rate
7460466, Dec 13 2002 INTELLECTUAL DISCOVERY CO , LTD Apparatus and method for signal constitution for downlink of OFDMA-based cellular system
7463698, May 25 2004 NTT DoCoMo, Inc Transmitter and transmission control method
7468943, Dec 15 2003 Samsung Electronics, Co., Ltd.; SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO , LTD Transmission/Reception apparatus and method in a mobile communication system
7469011, Sep 07 2003 Microsoft Technology Licensing, LLC Escape mode code resizing for fields and slices
7471963, Apr 09 2002 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO , LTD Mobile communication apparatus with multiple transmission and reception antennas and mobile communication method therefor
7483408, Jun 26 2002 Apple Inc Soft handoff method for uplink wireless communications
7483719, Nov 13 2003 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO , LTD ; KOREA ADVANCED INSTUTUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY KAIST Method for grouping transmission antennas in mobile communication system including multiple transmission/reception antennas
7486408, Mar 21 2006 ASML NETHERLANDS B V Lithographic apparatus and device manufacturing method with reduced scribe lane usage for substrate measurement
7486735, Feb 28 2003 Microsoft Technology Licensing, LLC Sub-carrier allocation for OFDM
7492788, Jun 27 2001 Ericsson AB Communication of control information in wireless communication systems
7499393, Aug 11 2004 Pantech Wireless, LLC Per stream rate control (PSRC) for improving system efficiency in OFDM-MIMO communication systems
7508748, Oct 24 2003 Qualcomm Incorporated Rate selection for a multi-carrier MIMO system
7508842, Aug 18 2005 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for pilot signal transmission
7512096, Nov 24 2004 WSOU Investments, LLC Communicating data between an access point and multiple wireless devices over a link
7545867, May 14 2003 CAVIUM INTERNATIONAL; MARVELL ASIA PTE, LTD Adaptive channel bandwidth selection for MIMO wireless systems
7548506, Oct 17 2001 Apple Inc System access and synchronization methods for MIMO OFDM communications systems and physical layer packet and preamble design
7551546, Jun 27 2002 Apple Inc Dual-mode shared OFDM methods/transmitters, receivers and systems
7551564, May 28 2004 Intel Corporation Flow control method and apparatus for single packet arrival on a bidirectional ring interconnect
7558293, Aug 26 2004 Nokia Technologies Oy Method for detecting initial operation mode in wireless communication system employing OFDMA scheme
7567621, Jul 21 2004 Qualcomm, INC Capacity based rank prediction for MIMO design
7573900, Jun 29 2002 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO , LTD Apparatus and method for transmitting data using transmit antenna diversity in a packet service communication system
7599327, Jun 24 2004 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for accessing a wireless communication system
7616955, Nov 12 2004 Broadcom Corporation Method and system for bits and coding assignment utilizing Eigen beamforming with fixed rates for closed loop WLAN
7623442, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
7627051, Nov 08 2004 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method of maximizing MIMO system performance by joint optimization of diversity and spatial multiplexing
7664061, Sep 05 2001 MODESMATA CORPORATION Closed-loop signaling method for controlling multiple transmit beams and correspondingly adapted transceiver device
7676007, Jul 21 2004 Intellectual Ventures Holding 40 LLC System and method for interpolation based transmit beamforming for MIMO-OFDM with partial feedback
7684507, Apr 13 2004 Apple Inc Method and apparatus to select coding mode
7724777, Jun 18 2004 Qualcomm Incorporated Quasi-orthogonal multiplexing for a multi-carrier communication system
7768979, May 18 2005 QUALCOMM INCORPORATED, A CORP OF DELAWARE Separating pilot signatures in a frequency hopping OFDM system by selecting pilot symbols at least hop away from an edge of a hop region
7899497, Aug 18 2004 RUCKUS IP HOLDINGS LLC System and method for transmission parameter control for an antenna apparatus with selectable elements
7916624, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
7924699, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
7990843, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
7990844, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
8014271, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
8031583, Mar 30 2005 Google Technology Holdings LLC Method and apparatus for reducing round trip latency and overhead within a communication system
8045512, Oct 27 2005 Qualcomm Incorporated Scalable frequency band operation in wireless communication systems
8095141, Mar 09 2005 Qualcomm Incorporated Use of supplemental assignments
8098568, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
8098569, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
8199634, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
8218425, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
8223627, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
8295154, Sep 13 2000 Qualcomm Incorporated Signaling method in an OFDM multiple access system
8446892, Mar 16 2005 Qualcomm Incorporated Channel structures for a quasi-orthogonal multiple-access communication system
8462859, Jun 01 2005 Qualcomm Incorporated Sphere decoding apparatus
8477684, Oct 27 2005 Qualcomm Incorporated Acknowledgement of control messages in a wireless communication system
20010021180,
20010021650,
20010024427,
20010030948,
20010047424,
20010053140,
20010055293,
20010055294,
20010055297,
20020000948,
20020003792,
20020015405,
20020018157,
20020039912,
20020044524,
20020058525,
20020061742,
20020077152,
20020085521,
20020090004,
20020090024,
20020101839,
20020122381,
20020122383,
20020122400,
20020122403,
20020128035,
20020147953,
20020159422,
20020160769,
20020160781,
20020168946,
20020172293,
20020172308,
20020176398,
20020181571,
20020191569,
20020193146,
20030002464,
20030003880,
20030020651,
20030027579,
20030035491,
20030036359,
20030040283,
20030043732,
20030043764,
20030063579,
20030068983,
20030072254,
20030072255,
20030072280,
20030072395,
20030073409,
20030073464,
20030076878,
20030076890,
20030086371,
20030086393,
20030096579,
20030103520,
20030109226,
20030109266,
20030112745,
20030123414,
20030125040,
20030128658,
20030133426,
20030142648,
20030142729,
20030147371,
20030157900,
20030161281,
20030161282,
20030161821,
20030165189,
20030181170,
20030185310,
20030190897,
20030193915,
20030202491,
20030202560,
20030216156,
20030223452,
20030228850,
20030235255,
20030236080,
20040001429,
20040001460,
20040002364,
20040009783,
20040010623,
20040015692,
20040017785,
20040032443,
20040037235,
20040038697,
20040042558,
20040048609,
20040048630,
20040054999,
20040057394,
20040058687,
20040066754,
20040066761,
20040066772,
20040067756,
20040072565,
20040076185,
20040077345,
20040077379,
20040081073,
20040081195,
20040086055,
20040087325,
20040095907,
20040097215,
20040097240,
20040098505,
20040105489,
20040114618,
20040120411,
20040125792,
20040128605,
20040131007,
20040131008,
20040131038,
20040131110,
20040136344,
20040136349,
20040141548,
20040156328,
20040160914,
20040160933,
20040162083,
20040165564,
20040166867,
20040166887,
20040170152,
20040170157,
20040171384,
20040171385,
20040178954,
20040179480,
20040179494,
20040179506,
20040179627,
20040181569,
20040185792,
20040190486,
20040190640,
20040202257,
20040203347,
20040208138,
20040218520,
20040219819,
20040219919,
20040224711,
20040228267,
20040228313,
20040229615,
20040240419,
20040240572,
20040248604,
20040252529,
20040252629,
20040252655,
20040252662,
20040257979,
20040264507,
20040264585,
20040264593,
20050002412,
20050002440,
20050002467,
20050002468,
20050003782,
20050008091,
20050009486,
20050013263,
20050025093,
20050030886,
20050030964,
20050034079,
20050041611,
20050041618,
20050041750,
20050041775,
20050044206,
20050047517,
20050052991,
20050053081,
20050053151,
20050063298,
20050068921,
20050073973,
20050073976,
20050075073,
20050084000,
20050085195,
20050085197,
20050085236,
20050088959,
20050111397,
20050113100,
20050122898,
20050128683,
20050128983,
20050135324,
20050135498,
20050138671,
20050141624,
20050147024,
20050147025,
20050152484,
20050157807,
20050159162,
20050164709,
20050165949,
20050174981,
20050175070,
20050180311,
20050180313,
20050181799,
20050192011,
20050195733,
20050195852,
20050195886,
20050201296,
20050204247,
20050207367,
20050215196,
20050215251,
20050226204,
20050239465,
20050243791,
20050246548,
20050249266,
20050254416,
20050254467,
20050254477,
20050254556,
20050259005,
20050259723,
20050259757,
20050265220,
20050265293,
20050265470,
20050271012,
20050276347,
20050276348,
20050277423,
20050281029,
20050281290,
20050282500,
20050286408,
20050286465,
20050289256,
20060002451,
20060013285,
20060018336,
20060018347,
20060018397,
20060026344,
20060029289,
20060034163,
20060034164,
20060034173,
20060039332,
20060039344,
20060039500,
20060040655,
20060045003,
20060050770,
20060056340,
20060057958,
20060067421,
20060078075,
20060083159,
20060083183,
20060089104,
20060092054,
20060093065,
20060104333,
20060104381,
20060109814,
20060111054,
20060111148,
20060114858,
20060120469,
20060120471,
20060126491,
20060133269,
20060133455,
20060133521,
20060140289,
20060146867,
20060153239,
20060155534,
20060156199,
20060172704,
20060189321,
20060193294,
20060203708,
20060203794,
20060203891,
20060203932,
20060209670,
20060209732,
20060209754,
20060209764,
20060209973,
20060215777,
20060218459,
20060223449,
20060233124,
20060233131,
20060233222,
20060262754,
20060270427,
20060274836,
20060280114,
20060285485,
20060285515,
20060286974,
20060286982,
20060286995,
20060291371,
20060292989,
20070004430,
20070005749,
20070009011,
20070019596,
20070025345,
20070041311,
20070041404,
20070041457,
20070047485,
20070047495,
20070049218,
20070053282,
20070053383,
20070060178,
20070064669,
20070070952,
20070071147,
20070097853,
20070097889,
20070097897,
20070097908,
20070097909,
20070097910,
20070097922,
20070097927,
20070097942,
20070097981,
20070098050,
20070098120,
20070099666,
20070110172,
20070115795,
20070149194,
20070149228,
20070159969,
20070160115,
20070165738,
20070177631,
20070177681,
20070183303,
20070183386,
20070207812,
20070211616,
20070211667,
20070230324,
20070242653,
20070263743,
20070280336,
20070281702,
20080039129,
20080063099,
20080095223,
20080095262,
20080151829,
20080181139,
20080214222,
20080253279,
20080267157,
20080299983,
20090003466,
20090010351,
20090022098,
20090041150,
20090110103,
20090180459,
20090197646,
20090201826,
20090201872,
20090213750,
20090213950,
20090262641,
20090262699,
20090285163,
20090287977,
20100002570,
20100135242,
20100220800,
20100232384,
20100238902,
20100254263,
20110064070,
20110235733,
20110235745,
20110235746,
20110235747,
20110306291,
20120002623,
20120120925,
20120140798,
20120140838,
20130016678,
20130208681,
20130287138,
20130315200,
20140247898,
AU2005319084,
CA2348137,
CA2477536,
CA2540688,
CA2577369,
CL9531997,
CL14892006,
CL14902006,
CL14922006,
CL15202006,
CL15212006,
CL19931400,
CL22032006,
CL22892004,
CL27102004,
CL29012006,
CL29022006,
CL29032006,
CL29042006,
CL29062006,
CL29072006,
CL29082006,
CL29932005,
CL30862004,
CL46151,
CL8461997,
CN1132474,
CN1252919,
CN1267437,
CN1284795,
CN1296682,
CN1344451,
CN1346221,
CN1383631,
CN1386344,
CN1402916,
CN1424835,
CN1467938,
CN1487755,
CN1520220,
CN1525678,
CN1636346,
CN1642051,
CN1642335,
CN1647436,
DE10240138,
DE10254384,
DE19800653,
DE19800953,
DE19957288,
EP488976,
EP568291,
EP740431,
EP786889,
EP805576,
EP807989,
EP844796,
EP981222,
EP1001570,
EP1047209,
EP1061687,
EP1074099,
EP1091516,
EP1093241,
EP1148673,
EP1180907,
EP1187506,
EP1204217,
EP1255369,
EP1267513,
EP1286490,
EP1335504,
EP1351538,
EP1376920,
EP1392073,
EP1434365,
EP1441469,
EP1445873,
EP1465449,
EP1478204,
EP1507421,
EP1513356,
EP1531575,
EP1533950,
EP1538863,
EP1542488,
EP1601149,
EP1643669,
EP1898542,
EP1941693,
FR2584884,
GB2279540,
GB2348776,
GB2412541,
IL201872,
JP10117162,
JP10210000,
JP10322304,
JP11168453,
JP11191756,
JP11196109,
JP11239155,
JP11298954,
JP11331927,
JP11508417,
JP2000102065,
JP2000184425,
JP2000332724,
JP2000511750,
JP2001016644,
JP2001045573,
JP2001057545,
JP2001156732,
JP2001238269,
JP2001245355,
JP2001249802,
JP2001285927,
JP2001521698,
JP2001526012,
JP2002026790,
JP2002290148,
JP2002515203,
JP2002534925,
JP2002534941,
JP2003032218,
JP2003101515,
JP2003169367,
JP2003174426,
JP200318054,
JP2003199173,
JP2003249907,
JP2003292667,
JP2003318857,
JP2003347985,
JP2003348047,
JP2003500909,
JP2003520523,
JP2003536308,
JP200369472,
JP2004007643,
JP2004023716,
JP2004048716,
JP2004072157,
JP2004096142,
JP2004153676,
JP2004158901,
JP2004162388,
JP2004194262,
JP2004201296,
JP2004215022,
JP2004221972,
JP2004266818,
JP2004297276,
JP2004297370,
JP2004297756,
JP2004507950,
JP2004529524,
JP2004534456,
JP2004535106,
JP200472457,
JP2005006337,
JP2005020530,
JP2005110130,
JP2005130491,
JP2005167502,
JP2005197772,
JP2005203961,
JP2005236678,
JP2005502218,
JP2005506757,
JP2005521327,
JP2005521358,
JP2006211537,
JP2006505172,
JP2006506860,
JP2006524930,
JP2007503790,
JP2007519281,
JP2007525043,
JP2007527127,
JP2008505587,
JP2008535398,
JP2008546314,
JP4111544,
JP4188372,
JP4301931,
JP4694628,
JP7336323,
JP746248,
JP8116329,
JP8288927,
JP9008725,
JP9131342,
JP9182148,
JP9214404,
JP9284200,
JP9501548,
KR150275,
KR100291476,
KR100606099,
KR101046824,
KR20000060428,
KR20010056333,
KR20010087715,
KR20030007965,
KR20030035969,
KR20040063057,
KR20040103441,
KR200471652,
KR20050063826,
RU2003125268,
RU2005129079,
RU2141168,
RU2141706,
RU2159007,
RU2162275,
RU2183387,
RU2192094,
RU2197778,
RU2201033,
RU2207723,
RU2208913,
RU2210866,
RU2216101,
RU2216103,
RU2216105,
RU2225080,
RU2235429,
RU2235432,
RU2237379,
RU2238611,
RU2242091,
RU2250564,
RU2257008,
RU2267224,
RU2285338,
RU2285351,
RU2285388,
RU2292655,
RU2335864,
RU2349043,
RU95121152,
SU1320883,
TW200302642,
TW200401572,
TW200718128,
TW232040,
TW248266,
TW269549,
TW508960,
TW510132,
WO4728,
WO165637,
WO169814,
WO195427,
WO2082689,
WO245293,
WO245456,
WO3034644,
WO3049409,
WO3069816,
WO3088538,
WO2004023834,
WO2004028037,
WO2004038984,
WO2004056022,
WO2004077850,
WO2004105272,
WO2004114564,
WO2004114615,
WO2005011163,
WO2005025110,
WO2005032004,
WO2005055465,
WO2005055484,
WO2005086440,
WO2006007292,
WO2006062356,
WO2007022430,
WO9848581,
WO2397,
WO33503,
WO70897,
WO101596,
WO1060106,
WO117125,
WO126269,
WO139523,
WO145300,
WO148969,
WO158054,
WO182543,
WO182544,
WO189112,
WO193505,
WO204936,
WO2060138,
WO207375,
WO2082743,
WO2093782,
WO2093819,
WO2100027,
WO215616,
WO219746,
WO231991,
WO233848,
WO249305,
WO249306,
WO249385,
WO3001696,
WO3001761,
WO3001981,
WO3003617,
WO3019819,
WO3030414,
WO3043262,
WO3043369,
WO3058871,
WO3067783,
WO3069832,
WO3073646,
WO3075479,
WO3085876,
WO3094384,
WO3103331,
WO2004002047,
WO2004004370,
WO2004008671,
WO2004008681,
WO2004015912,
WO2004016007,
WO2004021605,
WO2004030238,
WO2004032443,
WO2004038954,
WO2004038972,
WO2004038988,
WO2004040690,
WO2004040827,
WO2004047354,
WO2004049618,
WO2004051872,
WO2004062255,
WO2004064294,
WO2004064295,
WO2004066520,
WO2004068721,
WO2004073276,
WO2004075023,
WO2004075442,
WO2004075448,
WO2004075468,
WO2004075596,
WO2004084509,
WO2004086706,
WO2004086711,
WO2004095730,
WO2004095851,
WO2004095854,
WO2004098072,
WO2004098222,
WO2004102815,
WO2004102816,
WO2004114549,
WO2005002253,
WO2005015795,
WO2005015797,
WO2005015810,
WO2005015941,
WO2005020488,
WO2005020490,
WO2005022811,
WO2005043855,
WO2005046080,
WO2005055527,
WO2005060192,
WO2005065062,
WO2005069538,
WO2005074184,
WO2005096538,
WO2005122628,
WO2006019710,
WO2006026344,
WO2006044487,
WO2006069300,
WO2006069397,
WO2006077696,
WO2006096784,
WO2006099349,
WO2006099545,
WO2006099577,
WO2006127544,
WO2006134032,
WO2006138196,
WO2006138573,
WO2006138581,
WO2007024934,
WO2007024935,
WO2007025160,
WO2007051159,
WO9408432,
WO9521494,
WO9613920,
WO9701256,
WO9737456,
WO9746033,
WO9800946,
WO98014026,
WO9837706,
WO9853561,
WO9854919,
WO9941871,
WO9944313,
WO9944383,
WO9952250,
WO9953713,
WO9959265,
WO9960729,
//
Executed onAssignorAssigneeConveyanceFrameReelDoc
Oct 03 2005PALANKI, RAVIQualcomm IncorporatedASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0272540172 pdf
Nov 18 2011Qualcomm Incorporated(assignment on the face of the patent)
Date Maintenance Fee Events
May 09 2018M1551: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 4th Year, Large Entity.
May 11 2022M1552: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 8th Year, Large Entity.


Date Maintenance Schedule
Dec 23 20174 years fee payment window open
Jun 23 20186 months grace period start (w surcharge)
Dec 23 2018patent expiry (for year 4)
Dec 23 20202 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4)
Dec 23 20218 years fee payment window open
Jun 23 20226 months grace period start (w surcharge)
Dec 23 2022patent expiry (for year 8)
Dec 23 20242 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8)
Dec 23 202512 years fee payment window open
Jun 23 20266 months grace period start (w surcharge)
Dec 23 2026patent expiry (for year 12)
Dec 23 20282 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12)